(Reuters) - An
Egyptian court jailed more than 160 Muslim Brotherhood supporters to up
to 15 years in prison on Sunday, pressing a crackdown on the Islamist
group before a presidential election former army chief Abdel Fattah
al-Sisi is expected to win. Defendants chanted
"Down with military rule" as Judge Hassan Fareed handed down 10-year
jail terms to 126 Brotherhood supporters accused of violence and
membership of a terrorist group in one of the cases. A further 37 people
received 15-year sentences in a second case related to an alleged
attempt to blow up a Cairo metro station. The
security forces have detained thousands of Brotherhood supporters since
the military deposed president Mohamed Mursi last July following mass
protests against his rule. Sisi, expected to easily win the May 26-27 vote, has signaled there will be no reconciliation with the Brotherhood. Brotherhood
leader Mohamed Badie, who was among 683 people sentenced to death last
month, made a rare address in court, rejecting the accusations leveled
against his group. "We
have never responded to any attack against us with violence," said
Badie, addressing the judge in footage uploaded to Youtube. The
judiciary was being used in a political conflict the likes of which
Egypt had never seen before, he said. The
government declared the Brotherhood a terrorist group after an upsurge
in attacks on the police and army following Mursi's removal from power.
Many of the attacks have been claimed by radical Islamist groups such as
Ansar Bayt al-Maqdis. Mursi
is one of many Brotherhood leaders now standing trial. He faces charges
including conspiring with the Palestinian group Hamas against Egypt.
Badie described that charge as "lies and falsehood".
Egypt court jails more than 160 Brotherhood supporters
Reuters
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