Egypt Upholds Death Sentence for 12 Senior Muslim Brotherhood Figures
Egypt's highest civilian court on Monday upheld death sentences against 12 senior Muslim Brotherhood figures over a 2013 sit-in, judicial sources said.
The ruling, which cannot be
appealed against, means the 12 men could face execution pending approval by
President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi. They include Abdul Rahman Al-Bar, commonly
described as the group's mufti or top religious scholar, Mohamed El-Beltagi, a
former member of parliament, and Osama Yassin, a former minister.
Many Muslim Brotherhood figures
have been sentenced to death in other cases related to the unrest that followed
the ousting of Brotherhood president Mohamed Morsi in 2013, but the Court of
Cassation ordered retrials.
Monday's ruling relates to a mass
trial of hundreds of suspects accused of murder and incitement of violence
during pro-Brotherhood protests at Rabaa Adawiya square in Cairo in the weeks
after Morsi's overthrow.
In September 2018, an Egyptian
criminal court sentenced 75 people to death and issued varying jail terms for
more than 600 others. Many defendants were tried in absentia.
Forty-four of those sentenced to
death appealed to the Court of Cassation. Thirty-one had their sentences
changed to life in prison, while death sentences were upheld for 12 others.
A final defendant, the senior
Muslim Brotherhood leader Essam el-Erian, died in prison in Cairo in August
2020. Morsi died in prison in 2019.
The court also upheld jail terms
for many other defendants including a life sentence for Mohamed Badie, leader
of the outlawed Brotherhood, and a 10-year jail term for Morsi's son Osaama,
the judicial sources said.