(Reuters) - An
Egyptian court upheld three-year jail sentences on Tuesday for three
prominent liberal activists, judicial sources said, after days of
violence around the anniversary of the 2011 uprising that toppled
autocrat Hosni Mubarak. In 2013, a court
handed down the sentences against Ahmed Maher, Ahmed Douma and Mohamed
Adel -- leading figures of the pro-democracy revolt -- for protesting
without permission and assaulting police, under a new law suppressing
demonstrations. But
despite Abdel Fattah al-Sisi's crackdown on dissent, renewed unrest
emerged as Egyptians marked the anniversary on Sunday of the end of
three decades of autocratic rule under Mubarak. Some 25 people were
killed in anti-government protests on Sunday. A
car bomb killed one person and wounded two near a police station in
Egypt's second largest city Alexandria on Tuesday, and police discovered
three other explosive devices, security sources said, blaming militant
Islamists. Assailants
hurled petrol bombs at another police station in Alexandria, setting
fire to part of the building. There were no casualties. Two
bombs planted in front of a courthouse in Cairo's Heliopolis district
were defused while a bomb in front of another courthouse in Fayoum
province and one in Port Said exploded without causing injuries, the
security sources said. Five policemen were injured in an ambush in Shubra al-Khaima, on the northern outskirts of Cairo, state media said. Militants
have stepped up attacks against soldiers and police since the army
toppled freely elected President Mohamed Mursi of the Muslim Brotherhood
in 2013 following mass protests against his one-year-long rule. Critics accuse Sisi, the former army chief who was elected president last year, of returning Egypt to authoritarianism. Sisi says he is committed to democracy in Egypt, a strategic U.S. ally with influence across the Arab world. Armoured
vehicles including tanks were deployed late Tuesday night around the
Muslim Brotherhood stronghold of Matariya in Cairo, the website of
state-owned newspaper Al Ahram said. Matariya has seen some of the largest and most consistent protests against Sisi's rule. Security
forces have mounted the biggest crackdown against Islamists in Egyptian
history on Sisi's watch and liberal activists have also been jailed.
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