(Reuters) - An
Egyptian court has sentenced to death seven men, including prominent
Islamist militant Adel Habara, over the killing of 25 policemen last
year in an attack near the border with Israel, judicial sources said on Saturday. The attack took place
in August 2013 following the government's violent clearing of two
protest camps in Cairo, where supporters of deposed Islamist president
Mohamed Mursi had gathered to demand his reinstatement. The
court sentenced 25 others on related charges to prison for terms
ranging from 15 years to life. Only 19 of those sentenced were present,
including Habara, the sources said. The
ruling, which can be appealed, followed the referral of the death
sentence to the Grand Mufti, Egypt's highest Sunni Muslim authority. President
Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, who as army chief engineered Mursi's overthrow
following protests against his rule and then launched a crackdown on his
Muslim Brotherhood supporters, faces a growing Islamist insurgency in
the lawless Sinai Peninsula adjoining Israel and the Gaza Strip. Thousands
of Brotherhood supporters have been rounded up in the crackdown and
hundreds have since been sentenced to death. Liberal activists have also
been suppressed, with many of the leading lights of the 2011 popular
uprising also facing trial for breaking a law that seeks to curb
protests. More than 500
people, mostly police and soldiers, have been killed across Egypt in
Islamist militant attacks since last summer, according to government
statistics. Officials have expressed concern about fighters crossing Egypt's western border from Libya. Sisi's
government does not differentiate between radical Islamist groups based
mainly in the Sinai and the Brotherhood, which maintains it is a
peaceful organization and has denied any connection with recent
anti-state violence.
Egypt court sentences seven jihadists to death in Sinai case
Reuters
Comments About This Article
Please fill the fields below.