(Reuters) -
Egypt's public prosecutor has listed the Muslim Brotherhood's leader and
17 other top members of the group as terrorists, state media said on
Sunday, part of a sustained crackdown by the authorities on Islamists. Egypt
has already listed the Brotherhood as a terrorist organization and
jailed thousands of its supporters since the army removed Islamist
president Mohamed Mursi from power in July 2013 following mass protests
against his rule. The
Brotherhood's General Guide Mohamed Badie and Khairat El-Shater were
listed alongside other members of the group's leadership, state news
agency MENA said. The move
by public prosecutor Hesham Barakat was the first application of a
terrorism law passed this year that requires the authorities to identify
and list terrorist individuals and entities, MENA said. Most members of the Brotherhood's leadership in Egypt
are in custody and have already been given lengthy jail sentences or the
death penalty. Badie has already been sentenced to death several times
and Shater to life in prison. The
government blames the Brotherhood for attacks on Egyptian security
forces that have killed hundreds of police officers and soldiers since
Mursi's ouster. The
Brotherhood denies it is responsible for the attacks by suspected
Islamist militants and says it is committed to political change through
peaceful means.
Egypt lists top Brotherhood leader, 17 others as terrorists: state media

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