Terrorist Leader of Muslim Brotherhood Mahmoud Ezzat arrested in Egypt

Acting guide of the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood
group Mahmoud Ezzat was arrested, the Egyptian Interior Ministry announced on
Friday in a statement.
Ezzat (76 years old) was hiding inside an apartment
in the Fifth District in Cairo despite the rumors that claimed he was outside
Egypt, the statement added, noting that the security forces raided its
apartment, upon a warrant of arrest from the prosecution.
The police confiscated a laptop and a number of
mobile phones that have coded applications to enable him communicate with the
MB members, besides a number of documents talking about sabotaging plans
against the country, the statement said.
The terrorist leader was responsible for
establishing the armed wing of the terrorist Brotherhood and was also the
supervisor of sabotage operations committed by the organization members after
the June 30, 2013 revolution, the statement said.
He has been accused of assassinating former
Attorney-General Hisham Barakat, and injuring 9 other civilians in the same
incident in 2015. He also accused of killing Brigadier General Wael Tahoun
outside his house in Ain Shams district in 2015, killing Major General Adel
Rajai outside his home in Obour City, 2016. Ezzat was accused of attempting to
assassinate former Assistant Attorney General Judge Zakaria Abdel Aziz. in
2016, according the statement.
The detained terrorist also faces charges of
involvement in car bombing accident outside the Oncology Institute in August
2019, which claimed the lives of 20 civilians and injured 47 others, the
statement continued.
Ezzat was charged with cyberwar that was launched by
the group members on social media platforms in order to create chaos in the
society. He also charged with financing the group members to carry out
terrorist attacks.
The Ministry of Interior listed the verdicts that
had been issued in absentia against Ezzat. He received two verdicts of death in
the cases of spying for Hamas and Wadi al-Natroun Prison Break. He also got two
sentences of life imprisonment (50 years in imprisonment in total) for charges of
inciting violence and killing in trails dubbed in media as “the incidents of
the guidance office” and “Minya violent incidents.”