Egypt
(Reuters) - An Egyptian court has sentenced the leader of the outlawed Muslim
Brotherhood and 682 supporters to death on Monday 27th April,
intensifying a crackdown on the movement that could trigger protests and
political violence ahead of an election next month.
In another
case signaling growing intolerance of dissent by military-backed authorities, a
pro-democracy movement that helped ignite the uprising that toppled autocrat
Hosni Mubarak in 2011 was banned by court order, judicial sources said.
The death
sentence passed on Mohamed Badie, the Brotherhood's general guide, will
infuriate members of the group which has been the target of raids, arrests and
bans since the army forced President Mohamed Mursi from power in July.
The movement
says it is committed to peaceful activism. But some Brotherhood members fear
pressure from security forces and the courts could drive some young members to
violence against the movement's old enemy, the Egyptian state.
Badie,
considered a conservative hardliner, was charged with crimes including inciting
violence that followed the army overthrow of Mursi, who is also on trial on an
array of charges.
The slight,
70-year-old veterinary professor stood trial in Cairo in a separate case hours
after the sentence was affirmed.
"If
they executed me one thousand times I will not retreat from the right
path," Badie was quoted as saying by lawyer Osama Mursi, who attended one
of his trials in Cairo.
The comments
were published on the Facebook page of Osama Mursi, son of the Brotherhood
leader ousted as president.
Supporters
of Egypt's army and police gather at Tahrir square in Cairo, on the third
anniversary …
Two security
officials told Reuters that Badie appeared relaxed and joked, asking other
Brotherhood members to buy him the red outfit that prisoners condemned to death
wear.
Tough
measures against the Brotherhood suggest the authorities still see it as a
major threat, even though most of its leaders and thousands of members are
behind bars.
Authorities
are well aware that the movement founded in 1928 has survived repression under
successive Egyptian autocrats.
Yahoo News
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