(Reuters) -
Egypt's public prosecutor has appealed against the mass death sentences
issued by a provincial court, which had caused an international outcry,
state media reported on Saturday, in rare criticism by a senior member
of the judiciary of a court ruling. Mass trials in the
biggest Arab state have reinforced fears among human rights groups that
the government and anti-Islamist judges are using all levers of power to
crush opponents. Egypt's government says its judiciary is independent. A
court in April recommended the death sentence for the leader of the
Muslim Brotherhood and 682 supporters, and handed down a final capital
punishment ruling for 37 others, alarming the United States, the United Nations and rights groups. The
37 had initially been sentenced to death after a trial lasting only a
few days. They were part of another group of 529 Muslim Brotherhood
supporters, most of whom were jailed for life in the final sentencing. "The
appealed verdict (against) the convicted was marred by falsity, an
infringement of the right to defend (oneself) and an error in applying
the law," state newspaper Al-Ahram quoted public prosecutor Hesham
Barakat as saying with reference to the 37. "It
appears (to the public prosecutor) that the verdict is marred by flaws
and (he) sees the appeal as a way to seek the rule of law which states
that the accused is innocent until proven guilty in a legal trial which
guarantees that he has the right to defend himself," Al-Ahram said on
its website. It said the right to defend oneself must be given in a "practical" fashion, not just "theoretically". The appeal was also reported by state-run news agency MENA. Turmoil
has deepened since the army overthrew Egypt's first freely elected
president, Mohamed Mursi of the Brotherhood, in July. Security forces
have killed hundreds of Brotherhood members in the streets and arrested
thousands. Former army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi is widely expected to win presidential elections due on May 26-27.
Egypt prosecutor criticizes court over death sentences: state media
Reuters
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