Egypt sentences 683 to death in another mass  trial
Mamdouh Thabet and Maggie Michael (AP, April 28, 2014) 
Minya, Egypt — An Egyptian judge sentenced to death the Muslim 
Brotherhood's  spiritual leader and 682 other people Monday in the latest in a 
series of 
 high-stakes mass trials that have been unprecedented in scope, drawing 
sharp  condemnation from international rights groups. 
The verdicts — which were appealed by general prosecutor— come as the  
military-backed government has launched a massive crackdown against Islamist  
supporters of ousted leader Mohammed Morsi, under the banner of "war against  
terrorism" while tightening its grip on the Arab world's most populous  
nation. 
Suggesting there might be room for reversal, the same judge also reduced 
the  sentences against 529 defendants indicted in a similar case in March, 
upholding  the death penalty for only 37 and commuting the rest to life 
imprisonment. 
Still, the three dozen death sentences that were upheld was an  
extraordinarily high number for Egypt, compared to the dramatic trial in the  
wake of 
the 1981 assassination of President Anwar Sadat, when only five people  were 
sentenced to death and executed. 
Judge Said Youssef said he was referring Monday's death sentences — which  
were for convictions of violence and killing policemen — to the Grand Mufti, 
the  nation's top Islamic official — a requirement under Egyptian law that 
is usually  considered a formality but also gives room for the judge to 
change his mind. Of  the 683, all but 68 were tried in absentia. 
The government has conducted a series of mass trials of Brotherhood  
supporters after a crackdown in which hundreds were killed and nearly 16,000  
detained. It also branded the Brotherhood a terrorist group, a claim the group  
denies. 
Several secular-minded youth activists have been imprisoned for holding  
protests against a new law that prohibits the right to hold political 
gatherings  without prior police permits. On Monday, a court ordered ban of 
April 6 
youth  group and confiscation of its offices. The group was among several 
that  engineered the 2011 uprising against longtime leader Hosni Mubarak that 
set off  nearly three-year turmoil. 
"Egypt's judiciary risks becoming just another part of the authorities'  
repressive machinery, issuing sentences of death and life imprisonment on an  
industrial scale," Amnesty International's Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui said. 
She added that the case "once again expose how arbitrary and selective  
Egypt's criminal justice system has become" and urged authorities to "come 
clean  and acknowledge that the current system is neither fair nor independent 
or  impartial." 
The highest profile defendant convicted and sentenced to death on Monday 
was  Mohamed Badie, the Brotherhood's spiritual guide who — like several other 
 heavy-weight Muslim Brotherhood leaders— had no official post in Morsi's  
government but was believed to wield extensive influence on decision making  
during Morsi's year in power. If his sentence is upheld, it would make him 
the  most senior Brotherhood figure to receive capital punishment since one 
of the  group's leading ideologues, Sayed Qutb, was executed in 1966. 
Badie was not at the hearing in Minya on Monday but in another court, in  
Cairo, where he faces charges of murder and incitement to murder along with 
16  other Brotherhood leaders in a case connected to deadly protests outside 
the  group's headquarters last June. 
The trials were linked to deadly riots that erupted in Minya and elsewhere 
in  Egypt where Morsi's supporters allegedly attacked police stations and 
churches  in retaliation for security forces violent disbandment of sit-ins 
held by Morsi  supporters in Cairo last August that left hundreds dead. The 
cases involve  murder of three policemen and a civilian along with the injury 
of others. 
After Monday's ruling, which followed a single session in the case held 
last  month, Sarah Leah Whitson, the executive director of Human Rights Watch's 
Middle  East and North Africa Division, said the defendants were not given 
the chance to  properly defend themselves. The proceedings went on without 
the judge even  verifying that the defendants were present, she said. 
"The fact that the death sentences can be appealed provides little solace 
to  hundreds of families that will go to sleep tonight facing the very real 
prospect  that their loves ones could be executed without having an 
opportunity to present  a case in court," she said. "There is no more serious 
violation of the most  basic right of due process and the right to a fair trial 
than that." 
Germany's Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said in a statement that 
 the verdicts "make a mockery of the rule of law." 
"The Egyptian authorities risk further destabilizing the country and  
cementing a political and social division ahead of the planned presidential  
elections in May," he said. 
Sweden's Foreign Minister Carl Bildt also criticized the verdict in a 
message  posted on his Twitter account, saying "the world must and will react!" 
he  said. 
Once the mufti reviews Monday's ruling, the same court will hold another  
session on June 21 to issue the final verdicts. The ultimate decision is up 
to  the judge. 
As the ruling was announced, an outcry erupted outside the court among the  
families and relatives of the defendants. Women fainted and wailed as many 
cried  out, "Why? This is unfair!" 
"My three sons are inside," said a woman who only gave her first name,  
Samiya, as she screamed in grief. "I have no one but God." 
Mohammed Hassan Shehata said his son Mahmoud was arrested in January, six  
months after the alleged violence with which he was charged. 
"There is no evidence whatsoever," he said. "If my son is guilty, behead 
him  but if he is innocent, there will be a civil war." 
Another woman who also only gave her first name, Safiya, 48, said her 
brother  and son were sentenced to death. "I swear, they don't even pray, they 
don't go  to mosques," she said. "They are not Muslim Brotherhood." 
Gamal Sayyed, a 25-year-old school teacher who belongs to the Muslim  
Brotherhood and was speaking to The Associated Press from hiding, said he 
became  
a fugitive after he was arrested for three months and released pending  
investigation last year. 
"This ruling is aimed at vilifying the group, creating in public minds 
images  of devils, terrorists, and extremists," he said with a low voice. "This 
trial is  crazy ... but nothing is going to intimidate the youth in the 
streets protesting  against this bloody coup." 
Defense lawyer Ali Kamal, said Monday's hearing lasted only eight minutes.  
Security forces surrounded the court building and blocked roads, preventing 
 families and media from attending the proceedings. 
"This is against the spirit of the law," Kamal said. 
According to a judicial official who oversaw the investigation in the case, 
 evidence presented in the trial consisted mostly of footage of the 
defendants  showing them attacking and looting a police station in Cairo and 
setting fire to  several government buildings. The defendants faced nearly 14 
charges, five of  them punishable by death, said the official, who spoke on 
condition of anonymity  because he wasn't authorized to release the 
information. 
In a press conference in Istanbul, the Muslim Brotherhood-led alliance  
condemned Monday's ruling and called it "a farce." 
But some among the general public in Cairo appeared to approve of the  
heavy-handed measures as a way to restore security or under the influence of a  
media campaign seeking to turn all dissent into conspiracy against national  
interests. 
"Even if they sentence a million people to death, so what?" said Sadeek  
el-Moghazi, a 43-year-old newspaper vendor in the eastern district of  
Heliopolis. "This is the best ruling in the history of the Egyptian  judiciary

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