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Mohamed Abd El Ghany / Reuters

Egyptian court sentences 183 Muslim Brotherhood supporters to death

Court ruling, for 2013 killing of 16 policemen, is part of wider crackdown by Sisi on Muslim Brotherhood

An Egyptian court sentenced 183 supporters of the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood to death on Monday on charges of killing police officers, part of a sustained crackdown by authorities on armed attacks.

The men were convicted of playing a role in the killings of 16 policemen in the town of Kardasa in August 2013 during the upheaval that followed the army's ouster of President Mohamed Morsi. Thirty-four were sentenced in absentia.

Egypt mounted one of the biggest crackdowns in its modern history on the Brotherhood since the political demise of Morsi, the country's first democratically elected president.

Thousands of Brotherhood supporters have been arrested and put on mass trials in a campaign that human rights groups say shows the government is systematically repressing opponents.

President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, who as army chief toppled Morsi, describes the Brotherhood as a major security threat.

The movement says it is committed to peaceful activism.

The death sentences followed one of the bloodiest attacks on Egyptian security forces in years. The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant's (ISIL) Egypt wing claimed responsibility for a series of coordinated operations that killed at least 27 people last week.

Sisi blamed the Brotherhood for the violence and told Egyptians in a televised address that its fight will be a long, tough one. Egyptian authorities make no distinction between the Brotherhood, ISIL and Al-Qaeda, arguing that they have a shared ideology and are equally dangerous.

Security forces killed hundreds of Brotherhood supporters and arrested thousands of others after Morsi's ouster.

After the death sentences were read out on Monday, Brotherhood supporters held in metal cages shouted profanities at policemen. A defense lawyer looked at them and said, "You have God."

The Egyptian government's human rights record has come under closer scrutiny since activist Shaimaa Sabbagh was shot dead during a Cairo protest on Jan. 24, a day before the anniversary of the 2011 uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak. The Interior Ministry promised an investigation into her death.

Separately, an Egyptian police officer has been detained on suspicion of killing a suspected member of the Brotherhood in a hospital, the Interior Ministry has said.

The suspect was being treated in custody for wounds suffered while he was allegedly planting explosives. The ministry said that the man had provoked the policeman by insulting him. "Then the policeman lost control of his feelings," the ministry said.

Reuters

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