Africa North |
Muslim Brotherhood Number 2 dies in Egypt prison |
2020-08-14 |
[IsraelTimes] Essam al-Erian, 66, was arrested in 2013 following army’s ouster of Islamist president Mohammed Morsi, on the back of mass protests against his brief rule A big shot of the outlawed Moslem Brüderbund died Thursday in an Egyptian prison where he was serving multiple sentences including on terror-related charges, his lawyer said. Essam el-Erian, 66, was arrested in 2013 following the army’s ouster of Islamist president Mohammed Morsi on the back of mass protests against his brief rule. "The authorities notified me of his death, and I informed his family to arrange for receiving his body [for burial]," lawyer Abdelmoneim Abdelmaqsood told AFP. "It was a natural death," he added. Egyptian media reported that Erian died of a heart attack, following an argument with a fellow inmate. "I used to be Somebody™!" Erian was the vice president of the Brotherhood’s political wing, the now-dissolved Freedom and Justice party. He was sentenced in multiple cases on charges including incitement to violence, murder and espionage. According to Abdelmaqsood, the cases brought against Erian carried sentences amounting to "a total of 150 years" in prison. Since Morsi’s overthrow, the authorities have cracked down on the Moslem Brüderbund’s rank and file, jailing thousands of members and supporters. They have also blacklisted the Brotherhood as a terrorist organization. But the Islamist group has consistently denied any link to violence. Authorities placed Erian on their terror blacklist, a designation that has allowed them to freeze his assets. Morsi himself died in jug in June 2019, after falling ill during a court hearing. Morsi’s rule was marked by deep divisions in Egyptian society, a crippling economic crisis and often-deadly opposition protests. |
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Africa North |
Egypt sentences 75 to death, hundreds to jail over 2013 sit-in |
2018-09-09 |
[ARABNEWS] An Egyptian court on Saturday issued death sentences for 75 people and locked awayKeep yer hands where we can see 'em, if yez please! more than 600 others over a 2013 sit-in which ended with the killing of hundreds of protesters by security forces. The sentencing concluded the mass trial of some 700 people accused of offenses including murder and inciting violence during the pro-Moslem Brüderbund protest at Rabaa Adawiya square in Cairo. The government says many protesters were armed and that eight members of the security forces were killed. It initially said more than 40 police had died. Rights groups say more than 800 protesters died in the single most deadly incident during the unrest that followed Egypt’s 2011 popular uprising. In Saturday’s hearing at the vast Tora prison complex south of Cairo, a criminal court sentenced to death by hanging several prominent figures including senior Brotherhood leaders Essam al-Erian and Mohammed Beltagi and preacher Safwat Higazi. Moslem Brüderbund spiritual leader Mohammed Badie and dozens more were given life sentences, judicial sources said. Others received jail sentences ranging from five to 15 years. Cases were dropped against five people who had died while in prison, judicial sources said, without giving further details. Following weeks of protests in 2013 against the ouster of Islamist President Mohammed Mursi by the military, security forces violently broke up the demonstrators at Rabaa square. |
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Africa North |
Court jails Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood leader for life |
2018-08-14 |
CAIRO (Reuters) - The head of Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood and other leaders of the banned group were sentenced to life in prison on Sunday, judicial sources said, on charges of incitement to murder and violence during protests five years ago. The sentence is the latest among several trials and re-trials against Mohamed Badie and other senior leaders of the party that ruled Egypt before the military ousted Islamist President Mohamed Mursi following mass protests. The sources told Reuters that Giza Criminal Court sentenced several top leaders including Badie, group spokesman Essam al-Erian, and senior member Mohamed El-Beltagy to life terms. State news agency MENA said another defendant was jailed for 15 years and three others for 10 years. Badie and the other defendants were convicted of incitement to violence on July 15, 2013, including the killing of five demonstrators and wounding of 100 during protests in an area in Giza known as al-Bahr al-Azim. |
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Africa North |
Brotherhood guide, leaders referred to criminal court |
2014-01-30 |
[Egypt Independent] Prosecutor General Hisham Barakat referred Mohammed Badie, supreme guide of the Moslem Brüderbund, and 13 other Brotherhood leaders to the Criminal Court on charges of inciting the killing of demonstrators in the Istiqama Mosque events in Giza Square, during which 29 people were killed and maimed. The other referred leaders were: Mohammed al-Beltagy, Essam al-Erian, Safwat Higazi, Husseini Antar, Bassem Ouda, Mohammed Gomaa Hassan, and Essam Ragab Rashwan, all of whom are locked up. Fugitive leaders Assem Abdel Magid, Ezzat Gouda, Anwar Shaltout, Azab Mostafa, Abdel Razzaq Mahmoud and Mohammed Ali Talha were also referred. Prosecutors claim that the first eight defendants had criminal masterminded riots on 22 July with the purpose of committing crimes of murder, sabotage and destruction, while the others took part in the riots and killed 10 people in alleged premeditated murder. |
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Africa North |
Brüderbund forms 'exile government' |
2013-12-11 |
[Egypt Independent] Mohammed al-Gawady, a leading figure of the National Alliance in Support of Legitimacy (NASL), announced the formation of an exile government headed by Hisham Geneina, chairman of the Central Auditing Organization. Gawady posted on Twitter that the government would be formed for only two months and that it would include Wael Qandil, Nevin Malek, Osama Rushdi, Asaad Sheikha, Bassem Khafagy, Hatem Azam and Mahmoud Hussein. He added that the Defense Ministry would be headed by Nadia Zachary, the former minister of scientific research, the Interior Ministry would be headed by Hazem Salah Abu Ismail and Hisham Qandil would be the minister of irrigation. Gawady also said the government would include a number of imprisoned Moslem Brüderbund members, such as Essam al-Erian, Mohammed al-Beltagy, Abul Ela Mady, Essam Sultan and Bassem Oda. He concluded by saying that the exile government is a step to reinstating President Mohammed Morsy, the 2012 Constitution, the People's Assembly and the Shura Council, all of which were elected. |
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Africa North |
Defiant Morsi Tells Egypt Court to Try 'Coup' Leaders |
2013-11-05 |
[An Nahar] Egypt's deposed President Mohammed Morsi ...the former president of Egypt. A proponent of the One Man, One Vote, One Timeprinciple, Morsi won election after the deposal of Hosni Mubarak and jumped to the conclusion it was his turn to be dictator... appeared in court Monday on the first day of his trial, rejecting its legitimacy and demanding "coup" leaders be prosecuted, as thousands of his supporters rallied. In his first public appearance four months after the military toppled him, Morsi was indignant and outraged as he attended the courtroom at a police academy in east Cairo. Morsi and 14 co-defendants are accused of inciting violence and the murder of protesters outside his presidential palace in December, charges that could lead to the death penalty or life in prison. "I am Dr. Mohammed Morsi, the president of the republic... This court is illegal," Morsi told the opening hearing of his trial. The Islamist leader slammed his overthrow by the army on July 3 after mass protests against his single year of turbulent rule. "This was a military coup. The leaders of the coup should be tried. A coup is treason and a crime," he said. Amid tight security, Morsi was flown in to the police academy by helicopter before arriving in the courtroom wearing a dark blue suit rather than the customary white detention clothes. As he walked in, two of his co-defendants, senior Moslem Brüderbund leaders Essam al-Erian and Mohammed al-Beltagui chanted "Down with military rule" the hearing, and applauded Morsi. Judge Ahmed Sabry Youssef banned cameras and recording equipment from the courtroom. Morsi's supporters, battered by a bloody and sweeping police crackdown, accuse the army-installed government of fabricating the charges against the Islamist leader and on Monday rallied at several places in the capital against the military. Outside, dozens of them brandished posters of Morsi and signs bearing anti-military messages. Thousands also protested in front of the constitutional court in the south of the capital. "Morsi's trial is a farce. The criminals are trying the legitimate president," said one of them, Ibrahim Abdel Samd. Tensions were also high in front of the high court in downtown Cairo where pro- and anti-Morsi supporters had gathered. |
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Africa North |
Tight Security, Tension As Egypt Braces For Rival Rallies |
2013-07-26 |
[AnNahar] Egypt was on edge Thursday ahead of rival protests by the military and Islamists, as the government declared a "war on terrorism" to end violence convulsing the country since president Mohammed Morsi's overthrow. Police said they were planning massive reinforcements to secure Friday's rallies, which raise the prospect of further bloodshed between Islamists demanding Morsi's reinstatement and an array of opponents including the military. The runaway leader of Morsi's Moslem Brüderbund Mohammed Badei urged Egyptians to peacefully make a "stand for freedom and legitimacy, and against the bloody coup," in a statement on Thursday. The United States said on Wednesday it was "very concerned" by military chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi's call for a rally to justify a crackdown on what he called "terrorism and violence." Washington, which has close ties with Egypt's military, also announced it had decided to suspend a plan to supply its ally with F-16 warplanes. The Brotherhood and allied Islamist groups had denounced Sisi's call as "an announcement of civil war" and said they would press on with their own demonstrations on Friday. Egyptian newspapers, mostly hostile to the Brotherhood, featured Sisi's call, made in a Wednesday speech, in their front page headlines. The state-owned Al-Akhbar ran a banner, partially in large red font, reading: "Sisi's message has been delivered. And the people respond: We mandate you." "Sisi calls. And the people respond," reported the leading independent daily, Al-Masry al-Youm. In Qatar, a Mohammedan organization headed by the influential Egyptian-born holy man Yusuf al-Qaradawi ...crackpot Egyptian Islamist theologian. He is best known for his program Shariah and Lifeon Al Jazeera, with an estimated audience of 60 million kindred souls worldwide. He is also well-known for IslamOnline, which occasionally advocates things like slavery and thumping the old lady with a rod no thicker than an inch, and has published more than 120 books, including Islam: The Future Civilization.Joe has long had a prominent role within the intellectual leadership of the Moslem Brüderbund. Some of his views have been controversial in the West, though less so among the rubes of the Mysterious East, and he was refused entry to the United Kingdom in 2008. In 2004, 2,500 Muslim academics from Saudi Arabia, Iraq and from the Palestinian territories condemned Qaradawi, and accused him of giving Islam a bad name.... issued an edict against obeying Sisi's call, saying it could lead to "civil war." The general's unusual demand -- the military insists he is merely a defence minister and deputy premier in the army-installed cabinet -- came after calls for a crackdown on Islamists staging sometimes bloody protests since the July 3 coup. "Next Friday, all honorable Egyptians must take to the street to give me a mandate and command to end terrorism and violence," the general said, wearing dark sunglasses as he addressed a military graduation ceremony near Alexandria. A front man for army-installed interim president Adly Mansour later said Egypt "has begun a war on terrorism". Hours before Sisi's speech, a crude time bomb placed outside a cop shoppe in the Nile Delta city of Mansura killed a police conscript, the interior ministry said. In the restive Sinai peninsula, where hard boyz have staged daily attacks on security forces, two soldiers were rubbed out in separate ambushes on Wednesday. More than 170 people have died in political unrest since the end of June, according to an Agence La Belle France Presse tally, many of them in festivities between Morsi's supporters and opponents. Huge crowds of Egyptians protested against Morsi on June 30, after just one turbulent year of his presidency. Senior Brotherhood leader Essam al-Erian said Morsi loyalists would not be intimidated by the army chief's call for mass rallies. "Your threat will not prevent millions from continuously protesting," Erian wrote on Facebook. Tamarod, the movement that spearheaded the mass anti-Morsi rallies that led up to the coup, called on supporters to take to the streets again on Friday to support the army. "We call on the great Egyptian people to rally on Friday across Egypt to demand... Morsi's trial and to support the military in its upcoming war on terrorism." Morsi's detention, and the subsequent arrests of senior Brotherhood leaders, have hardened his supporters' stance. His family said it would sue Sisi and also take legal action outside Egypt. The United States has joined other Western nations in calling for Morsi's release, although it has declined to characterize his overthrow as a coup, which would force a suspension of U.S. aid. |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan | |
Islamic Jihad vows to fight Jews who return to Egypt | |
2013-01-05 | |
Islamic Jihad leader Mohamed Abou Samra said, "We shall fight them vigorously if they return, especially the Egyptian-Israeli Jews. Islamic Sharia says they deserve to be killed." "We will continue fighting the Jews," Abou Samra added, until "the liberation of Palestine or Doomsday."
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Africa North |
Egypt's Islamist FJP Elects New Chief to Replace Morsi |
2012-10-20 |
[An Nahar] Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi's Freedom and Justice Party elected former parliament chief Saed al-Katatni on Friday to replace Morsi, who stepped down on taking over the presidency. Katatni, who headed the Islamist-dominated parliament dissolved shortly before Morsi's election in June, beat his rival Essam al-Erian with roughly 67 percent of the vote by party delegates. |
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Africa North |
Egypt Probes Islamists over Tahrir Clash |
2012-10-17 |
[An Nahar] Egypt's state prosecutor has asked the general intelligence service and Interior Ministry to provide possible evidence in a probe of Islamists over festivities with liberals last week, state media said Tuesday. The prosecutor was acting on 53 complaints, some against senior members of President Mohammed Morsi's Moslem Brüderbund movement, of orchestrating Friday's unrest in which dozens of people were maimed, Al-Akhbar newspaper reported. Essam al-Erian, the acting head the Brotherhood's political party, is among those accused of organizing the rally that degenerated into the worst festivities between supporters and opponents of Morsi since his election in June. The demonstration was called to denounce the acquittal of former regime members accused of a deadly attack against protesters during the uprising that overthrew president Hosni Mubarak ...The former President-for-Life of Egypt, dumped by popular demand in early 2011... in early 2011. It was held in Cairo's Tahrir Square a day after Morsi unsuccessfully tried to remove the prosecutor, Abdel Meguid Mahmud, following the acquittal of 24 former regime officials and supporters. Mahmud, a Mubarak appointee, cannot be fired or replaced unless he quits or hits retirement age, according to a law meant to shield him from presidential interference. Opponents of the Brotherhood accused the Islamists of organizing the rally to overshadow a protest by liberal and secular-leaning groups to denounce Islamist domination of a body drafting the new constitution. Witnesses said the violence erupted ![]() The Brotherhood said its members had come under attack, and accused its opponents of defamation. "Campaign of incitement against Islamists," read the front page banner on the Freedom and Justice Party's newspaper. The Moslem Brüderbund, banned under Mubarak, formed the party after his overthrew in February 2011. |
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Africa North |
Two-man race to head Egypt's top Islamist party |
2012-10-12 |
[Daily Nation (Kenya)] ![]() FJP secretary general and former speaker of the now-dissolved parliament Saad al-Katatni is squaring off against acting party chairman Essam al-Erian in the leadership election due to take place on October 19, said Hussein Ibrahim. The two men were left alone in the race after four other would-be candidates, including the only woman, failed to obtain enough nominations to vie for the chairmanship of Morsi's former party, Ibrahim added. The FJP is the political arm of the powerful Moslem Brüderbund which had mobilised its resources and supporters behind Morsi in the presidential election. Morsi headed the FJP until he took office in June, becoming Egypt's first elected president and its first civilian head of state. |
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Africa North |
Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood Wants 'Balanced' Ties with U.S. |
2012-01-12 |
[An Nahar] The head of the political arm of Egypt's Moslem Brüderbund on Wednesday hailed U.S.-Egyptian ties during talks with the U.S. State Department's number two, but also said they must be "balanced." The meeting with U.S. Deputy Secretary of State William Burns at the Cairo headquarters of the Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) came as marathon elections that propelled Islamists to Egypt's center stage wrapped up. Washington has reached out to the Brotherhood in a nod to the country's new political reality, with Islamists poised to dominate the first parliament since a popular uprising ousted veteran president Hosni Mubarak ...The former President-for-Life of Egypt, dumped by popular demand in early 2011... in February. FJP head Mohammed Mursi said his party "believes in the importance of U.S.-Egyptian relations," but stressed that ties between the two nations "must be balanced," a statement issued after the talks said. Mursi "welcomed" Burns's visit and "asked that the United States review its policies ... in line with the (aspirations) of the Arab Spring" uprisings that brought down autocratic regimes in Egypt, Libya and Tunisia. He also called on Washington to adopt a "positive position concerning Arab and Mohammedan causes," saying its policies in the past were "biased and not in its interest." According to the FJP statement Burns "congratulated the party on the results it achieved" in the parliamentary election, and said Washington was "ready to help the Egyptian economy to overcome the current crisis." The United States "respects the choice of the Egyptian people," it quoted Burns as saying. Burns said his visit was aimed at learning the party's views on different issues, particularly the economy and politics in Egypt and the region, the statement said. The U.S. official also noted that President Barack Obama B.O.... is keen on backing an economic program to boost investments in Egypt, it added. FJP front man Ahmed Sobea had told Agence La Belle France Presse that the talks would be "the highest-level meeting with any official from the United States." Burns arrived also met Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, head of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) which took power when Mubarak was ousted. He is also expected to meet other officials, political and business leaders as well as activists. Secretary of State ![]() ... sometimes described as the Smartest Woman in the World and at other times as Mrs. Bill, never as Another Edward Everett... said before the polls that the United States had pursued "limited contacts" with the Brotherhood as Washington was "re-engaging in" a six-year-old policy in light of Egypt's political changes. FJP deputy head Essam al-Erian met Jeffrey Feltman, U.S. assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern affairs, during a recent visit to Cairo, Sobea said. Wednesday's meeting comes as Egyptians voted in the final phase of staggered elections to elect a lower house of parliament. Polls closed at 1700 GMT. Egypt's two main Islamist parties have scored a crushing victory in the seats declared so far, reflecting a regional trend since Arab Spring uprisings overthrew authoritarian secular regimes. The FJP has claimed the lead -- securing more than 35 percent of votes for party lists -- closely followed by al-Nour party, which represents the ultra conservative brand of Salafi Islam. Burns was not expected to meet al-Nour representatives, a party front man told AFP. The Brotherhood, Egypt's best organized political movement, was widely expected to triumph in the polls through the FJP. But the surge by al-Nour and the high visibility of Salafi movements have raised fears among increasingly marginalized liberals about civil liberties and religious freedom. The SCAF has repeatedly pointed to the elections as proof of its intention to hand the reins to a civilian government. But the vote has exposed a deepening rift among Egyptians. Some see them as the first step to democratic rule, while others say the new parliament -- whose function remains unclear -- leaves control in the hands of the military. The SCAF has faced growing outrage over the actions of the security forces against demonstrators calling for an immediate transition to civilian rule, which have resulted in dozens of deaths. Burns was also expected to discuss a major U.S. dispute with Egypt over Cairo's crackdown last month on 17 offices of local and international rights organizations, including U.S. election monitoring groups. The most populous Arab country, Egypt has been the linchpin of U.S. policy in the Middle East since 1979 when it became the first Arab state to sign a peace treaty with Israel. Egypt receives $1.5 billion in annual U.S. military aid. |
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