Mohamed Morsi, Egypt’s First Freely Elected President, Sentenced to Death – Deirdre Fulton

An Egyptian court on Saturday sentenced ousted president Mohamed Morsi and more than 100 other defendants to death for their role in a 2011 mass prison break.

Morsi, Egypt’s first democratically elected president, was ousted by the military in July 2013 after days of street protests by Egyptians demanding that he be removed because of his divisive rule. His overthrow triggered a government crackdown on his Muslim Brotherhood movement in which hundreds of people have died and thousands have been imprisoned.

Last month, Morsi, along with 14 other defendants, was sentenced to 20 years in maximum security prison and five years of parole over the killing of demonstrators outside his palace in 2012.

Al Jazeera reports that many of those sentenced on Saturday were tried in absentia, including

Yusuf al-Qaradawi, an influential Islamic scholar based in Qatar.

According to the Associated Press, “Supporters of Morsi and his now-outlawed Muslim Brotherhood chanted ‘down, down with military rule’ as the verdict was announced in the courtroom, a converted lecture hall in the national police academy in an eastern Cairo suburb.”

All along, rights groups including Amnesty International have criticized the trials as being “grossly unfair” and indicative of “the deplorable state of the country’s criminal justice system.”

Following Saturday’s announcement, Said Boumedouha, deputy director of Amnesty International’s Middle East and North Africa Program, declared: “Condemning Mohamed Morsi to death after more grossly unfair trials shows a complete disregard for human rights. His trials were undermined even before he set foot in the courtroom. The fact that he was held for months incommunicado without judicial oversight and that he didn’t have a lawyer to represent him during the investigations makes these trials nothing but a charade based on null and void procedures.”

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