Africa North |
Egypt Designates 31 Muslim Brotherhood Members as Terrorist |
2021-09-05 |
[ENGLISH.AAWSAT] An Egyptian court on Friday added 31 members of the banned Moslem Brüderbund to terrorist lists for a period of five years. Among them is Aisha Shater, daughter of the group’s deputy leader Khairat al-Shater. She is facing charges of joining a terrorist group that was formed in violation of the law and of incitement against the state. All 31 members were charged with corroborating in 2018 with a terrorist group in achieving its goals, receiving funding for terrorist purposes and taking part in a criminal conspiracy with the aim of committing a terrorist crime. Egypt banned the Brotherhood in 2014, designating it as a terrorist organization. It has been accused of involvement in Hundreds of its leaders and supporters, including its supreme guide Mohammed Badie, are on trial on charges largely related to incitement to violence. Several verdicts, including death sentence ![]() s, have been issued against the suspects. |
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Africa North |
Egypt Brotherhood chief, deputy get life for 'spying' |
2019-09-12 |
[ALARABY.CO.UK] An Egyptian court has sentenced 11 Moslem Brüderbund leaders to life in prison on charges of espionage with the Paleostinian holy warrior group Hamas, a regional Iranian catspaw,. They included the Brotherhood's supreme guide Mohammed Badie and his deputy Khairat al-Shater who were both handed life sentences - 25 years in Egypt. This is the latest of several sentences against Badie, who received a life sentence last week on charges related to mass prison breaks during the 2011 uprising. Five other Brotherhood members were sentenced to jail terms ranging from seven to 10 years while six were acquitted, the source said. The defendants were accused of "committing crimes in collaboration with foreign organizations" namely Hamas and the Lebanese Shiite holy warrior group Hezbollah, the source said. They were also accused of "financing terrorism" and committing acts undermining the country's stability and security. Mohammed Fahmy, the judge presiding over the case, said before the verdict was announced: "The crimes the defendants committed harmed the independence and security of the country." "They betrayed their nation and there is no excuse for them," he added. The verdict can still be appealed, the source added. Rights groups have repeatedly criticised such sentencings and called on authorities to ensure fair trials. |
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Africa North |
Egyptian court gives life sentence to Muslim Brotherhood leaders |
2018-12-06 |
[PRESSTV] A court in Egypt has sentenced to life in prison Moslem Brüderbund leader Mohammed Badie, his deputy Khairat al-Shater, and four others over their alleged role in violence at the time of the ouster of the first democratically elected President Mohammed Morsi in 2013. Judicial sources said the court issued the ruling on Wednesday as part of a retrial over violence between Brotherhood supporters and opponents near the Brotherhood headquarters in the capital Cairo back in 2013. The rulings are the latest among several trials and retrials of Badie and other big shots of the Brotherhood that ruled the African country before the military, led by incumbent President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, ousted Morsi following mass protests in 2013. The court on Wednesday sentenced Badie, Shater and four others to life in prison over violence between Brotherhood supporters and opponents near the headquarters, but acquitted former Parliament Speaker Saad al-Katatny along with a former minister, two prominent Brotherhood figures and two others. All of the defendants have the right to appeal one final time before the Court of Cassation, Egypt's highest civilian court. The public prosecution may also appeal the acquittals or the life prison terms that two defendants got instead of death penalty ![]() The defendants faced charges of inciting violence against the protesters in front of the Brotherhood headquarters, aggravated battery and possession of firearms. Authorities had referred 18 defendants, including five who remain on the lam, to trial in the case and a ruling was issued in 2015. |
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Arabia | |
Khashoggi case: French historian Adler poses questions about Turkey, Qatar | |
2018-11-29 | |
[ENGLISH.ALARABIYA.NET] Writing in the French newspaper ‘Le Figaro’, French author and historian Alexandre Adler criticized the developments in the Jamal Khashoggi case. The French writer began his article by stating: “There is a Latin saying that reads ‘Audiatur et alterapars’ which means that ‘you have to always listen to the opposing party’, yet this was not applied in the case of Khashoggi’s killing. TURKISH INTELLIGENCE He continued: “First and foremost, there is the problem of the ‘one witness is not a useful one’. All the detailed information revealed about Khashoggi’s murder within the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul came from a single source - the Turkish intelligence service. “We are talking here about a security service that has been purged three times in the recent past and is fully subjected to the instructions of its commander Hakan Fidan. The latter was among those who organized the fake coup which led in just one day to the arrest of hundreds.” The French journalist added: “It is evident that the credibility of the Turkish authorities’ immediate testimonies, and their deployment is an elaborate device that operates outside and within the Saudi consulate.” In contrast, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman chose not to further delay and recognize the responsibility of the Saudi state in the killing of Khashoggi and to publicly apologize to one of the victim’s brothers. He proceeded: ”It remains for us to see whether the Crown Prince, who is presented by some media without any evidence as the mastermind behind the killing, although it is irrational to order a crime to be committed by the State that would permanently harm the image of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, especially at a time when the fruits of the Kingdom’s strategy to isolate Qatar without violence are ripe for the taking, including the beginning of Doha's retreat about terrorist organizations.” THE PLOT The French writer recalls the scenario of Khashoggi’s case, skeptically stating: “An improvisational style leading to the point of committing murder, without even thinking of the horrific question about getting rid of the body - all of it under Turkish Camera surveillance - and of course, the dramatic scenario of dismembering the victim’s body.” As we know, Istanbul is a very busy and bustling city which makes it a potential place to commit and conceal a murder either by poisoning or a hit-and-run, away from the consulate, which leads to suspicions. "Everything here points to a plot. We can even feel that that the real killing’s perpetrators have searched for all the fake assassination methods in the Islamic world to find the precedent in the 1966 case of the unfortunate Ibn Baraka.” All the movements of Khashoggi in Istanbul were known to Saudi Arabia as well as to those who had every reason to seek revenge from Mohammed bin Salman like in an Agatha Christie novel. "We are not talking here about the leaders of Qatar, who have started to seriously negotiate about a useful truce with Saudi Arabia.” DO THE TURKS KNOW MORE? Alexandre Adler added: “Everything happened as if Istanbul knew at least that something was going to happen at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul.” It is not necessary to assume that the Turks knew more about the motivations that led them to an intense vigilance in the three previous days. Adler questioned: “Does Qatar and the Muslim Brotherhood, which gained further strength in Turkey, along with its power broker, the Egyptian billionaire Khairat al-Shater,
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Africa North |
Egypt Police Arrest Muslim Brotherhood 'Financier' |
2015-10-23 |
![]() Please don't kill me! a senior figure and key financier of the banned Moslem Brüderbund on Thursday. Businessman Hassan Malek was detained at his home in a suburb of Cairo, police sources said. "The prosecution issued an arrest warrant for him, as he is implicated in several judicial cases," an interior ministry source said without elaborating. In 2006, Malek was arrested under former president Hosni Mubarak ...The former President-for-Life of Egypt, dumped by popular demand in early 2011... Two years later a military tribunal sentenced him to prison, along with another businessman and Brotherhood number two, Khairat al-Shater, for financing a banned ...the word bannedseems to have a different meaning in Pakistain than it does in most other places. Or maybe it simply lacks any meaning at all... organization. While officially prohibited, the Brotherhood was tolerated under Mubarak and even ran candidates for office as independents. Both men were freed in 2011 after the popular uprising that ousted Mubarak. In 2013, then army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sissi overthrew Mubarak's successor, Mohammed Morsi, and totally proscribed the Brotherhood. It also launched a crackdown on the group, in which many Islamists were killed, with thousands arrested and hundreds of them condemned to death in speedy mass trials. |
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Africa North | |
Egypt Brotherhood Chief Handed Fourth Life Sentence | |
2015-03-01 | |
Three co-defendants of Mohammed Badie -- the Islamist movement's spiritual leader who already faces three other life terms from other cases -- were sentenced to death in the same trial. Fourteen others, including Badie's deputies Khairat al-Shater and Saad al-Katatni, were handed life terms. All were convicted on charges of "murder" and "incitement to murder" as well as possessing arms, but can appeal the verdicts. Badie and the other defendants present in court for the verdict denounced the sentence and shouted: "Down with military rule". On June 30, 2013, protesters stormed and torched the Cairo headquarters of the Moslem Brüderbund as millions erupted into the streets of Egypt demanding the resignation of president Mohammed Morsi. Morsi, who belongs to the Brotherhood, was ousted just days later by then army chief and now President Abdel Fattah al-Sissi after one year in office. Prosecutors said 12 protesters were killed when they clashed with Morsi supporters during the storming of the Brotherhood offices, while more than 90 were maimed. Badie has already been sentenced by three separate courts to three life terms, and he was also handed two death sentences that were later overturned on appeal. Since Morsi's overthrow in July 2013, the authorities have launched a brutal crackdown against his supporters leaving hundreds dead and thousands tossed in the slammer Youse'll never take me alive coppers!... [BANG!]... Ow!... I quit! after often speedy mass trials. Morsi himself is facing several trials on charges that are punishable by death, while his Islamist movement has been designated a "terrorist group". | |
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Africa North |
Egypt Sentences Four Brotherhood Members to Death |
2014-12-08 |
![]() A crowd of angry protesters stormed and torched the headquarters on June 30, 2013, as millions erupted into the streets in Cairo and other cities demanding Islamist President Mohammed Morsi's resignation. Morsi, who belongs to the Moslem Brüderbund, was ousted just days later by then army chief and now President Abdel Fattah al-Sissi after one year in office. A Cairo court sentenced the four men to death after finding them guilty of "killing, inciting to kill, possessing guns and live ammunition and joining gangs to terrorize people," a judicial official said. Prosecutors said 12 protesters were killed when they clashed with Morsi supporters during the storming of the offices. More than 90 protesters were maimed. Sunday's sentences are preliminary and will be forwarded to the country's mufti, or top Moslem holy man, to be ratified. Decisions on 14 other defendants in the case, including Moslem Brüderbund chief Mohammed Badie and his deputies Khairat al-Shater and Saad al-Katatni, will be made at the next hearing on February 28, the official said. All the defendants were present in court on Sunday. Badie and his two deputies along with Morsi are facing several other trials. Badie has already been sentenced to death in one case and to life in prison in three others. |
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Africa North | |
Jailed Muslim Brotherhood members on hunger strike | |
2013-12-24 | |
More than 450 jailed members of the Muslim Brotherhood have gone on hunger strike in Egypt in protest at their "inhumane treatment", the group says.
The Brotherhood said that senior figures were taking part in the hunger strike, including one-time presidential hopeful Khairat al-Shater, secretary-general of the Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party Mohammed al-Beltagi, and Mr Morsi's former foreign affairs adviser Essam al-Haddad. The group did not say if Mr Morsi himself was taking part in the strike. | |
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Africa North | |
Brotherhood leaders to be tried August 25 | |
2013-08-23 | |
Supreme Guide Mohammed Badie, who is currently in hiding, and his two deputies Khairat al-Shater and Rashad Bayoumi who are being held in Cairo's Tora prison, are accused of inciting violence against protesters outside the Islamist group's headquarters on June 30. They will face trial on August 25 together with three Brotherhood members who are accused of killing protesters. | |
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Africa North |
Egypt 'freezes assets' of Muslim Brotherhood leaders |
2013-07-14 |
Egypt's public prosecutor has frozen the assets of 14 Islamist leaders, according to judicial sources. The Muslim Brotherhood head Mohammed Badie and his deputy Khairat al-Shater are reported to be among them. Mr Badie and other Brotherhood figures are already the subject of arrest warrants, while the ousted President Mohammed Morsi remains in custody. On Sunday, army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi defended the decision to remove him from power. In a speech, he said he had urged the Islamist president to hold a referendum on his rule days before he was overthrown. "The response was total rejection," he added. Gen al-Sisi said no group would be barred from politics: "Every political force... must realise that an opportunity is available for everyone in political life and no ideological movement is prevented from participating." |
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Africa North |
Egypt security slaps travel ban on Morsi, top Islamists |
2013-07-04 |
[Al Ahram] Egyptian security forces on Wednesday imposed a travel ban on President Mohamed Morsi and several top Islamist allies over their involvement in a prison escape in 2011, security officials said. Airport officials confirmed to AFP that they had received orders to prevent the leaders -- including Morsi, Muslim Brotherhood chief Mohammed Badie and his deputy Khairat al-Shater -- from travelling abroad. |
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Africa North |
Guards of senior Muslim Brotherhood figure arrested in Egypt |
2013-07-02 |
Egyptian security forces Monday arrested several guards of Khairat al-Shater, the deputy leader of the ruling Muslim Brotherhood movement, after an exchange of fire near his house, a security source said, dpa reported. Al-Shater's son, Saad, told Al Arabiya broadcaster that police forces opened fire on their house in Cairo and arrested the driver. It was not clear whether al-Shater, seen as the most influential man in the brotherhood, was at home at the time. |
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