Egyptian police arrested five prominent anti-coup leaders on
Tuesday, two days ahead of protests their alliance has called to mark the first
anniversary of the ousting of the country’s first freely elected president
Mohamed Morsi.
Magdy Hussein, a leader of the Anti-Coup Alliance that has
spearheaded protests demanding Morsi’s reinstatement, was arrested at dawn
according to security officials who spoke to AFP. He faces charges of inciting
violence and threatening national security and stability.
Also detained was Nasr Abdel Salam, head of the Building and
Development party, the political arm of Gamaa Islamiya, a former militant group
that has since renounced violence. Two other leaders of the party, which is
part of the anti-coup alliance, were also arrested.
Police also detained Hossam Khalaf, a leader of the moderate
Islamist party Wassat, security officials said. Khalaf, whose party is also
part of the pro-Morsi alliance, is accused of inciting violence.
Since the military deposed Morsi on 3 July last year,
authorities have waged a brutal crackdown on his supporters that has seen more
than 1,400 people killed in street clashes and over 41,000 jailed, according to
Egyptian monitoring group Wikithawra.
The Anti-Coup Alliance condemned the arrests as “kidnappings”
and renewed its call for pro-Morsi protests during a “day of rage” on Thursday,
which will be the first anniversary of his removal from office.
Since Morsi’s ouster the alliance has led regular protests
against the new authorities, but its rallies have shrunk as tens of
thousands of demonstrators have been detained, with another 31 supporters of
the former president jailed for three years on Tuesday.
Judicial sources told the Turkish Anadolu Agency a court in the
northern Gharbiya province sentenced 25 Morsi supporters to three years in
prison for joining a “terrorists organisation”, in a reference to the Muslim
Brotherhood that authorities outlawed in December last year.
Another court in Cairo jailed six Brotherhood members on
violence-related charges and acquitted seven others, the source told Anadolu.
The court found defendants guilty of “rioting” and “assaulting
security forces” during deadly clashes last summer in Cairo’s Ramses Square,
where hundreds were killed as security forces cleared protests in support of
the ousted president.
Tuesday’s verdicts are still subject to appeal, the judicial
source added.
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