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Egypt sentences 230 anti-Mubarak activists to life

By AFP - Feb 05,2015 - Last updated at Feb 05,2015

CAIRO — An Egyptian court Wednesday sentenced to life 230 activists from the 2011 revolt against long-time president Hosni Mubarak, including leading campaigner Ahmed Douma, judicial sources said.

Thirty-nine others, all minors, were jailed for 10 years.

All 269 defendants were convicted of taking part in clashes with security forces near Cairo's Tahrir Square in December 2011, the sources said.

They were also found guilty of assaulting security forces and setting on fire government buildings.

A life sentence in Egypt is 25 years.

The verdict, which can be appealed, is the harshest delivered so far against non-Islamist activists amid a government crackdown on opponents overseen by President Abdel Fattah Al Sisi.

Hundreds of Islamist supporters of Mubarak's successor, Mohamed Morsi, have been sentenced to death after often speedy trials described by the United Nations as "unprecedented in recent history”.

Douma, 26, rose to prominence during the 2011 uprising that drove Mubarak from power and was also a key protest leader against Morsi.

He is already serving three years for violating a law prohibiting protests without a permit, and was also given a three-year sentence at a previous hearing of the current trial for insulting the judiciary.

Defence lawyer Sameh Samir criticised Wednesday's ruling.

"The judge was biased against the defendants and their lawyers since the start of the trial," Samir said.

"He referred the defence lawyers to prosecution, he barred us from attending the hearings and now he has issued an unprecedented verdict in Egypt's history."

At a previous hearing, Judge Shehata had called for the prosecution to investigate five defence lawyers for insulting the judiciary.

 

'Verdict against the revolution'

 

Douma's brother Mohamed lashed out at the verdict.

"It's an incredibly exaggerated sentence. It's a sentence against the revolution and shows personal hatred of the judge against the revolution and the activists," Mohamed told AFP.

"This was expected of him."

Shehata has presided over several trials of dissidents since then army chief Sisi ousted Morsi in July 2013.

On Monday, he confirmed death sentences against 183 men convicted of killing 13 policemen in a town near Cairo, in a verdict criticised by international rights groups.

Shehata had also sentenced three Al Jazeera journalists to between seven and 10 years in a trial that prompted international outrage.

That verdict was overturned and a retrial was ordered by an appeals court in January.

One of the three journalists, Australian Peter Greste, was deported Sunday under a presidential decree.

Rights groups and critics of Sisi say authorities are using the judiciary as an arm to repress any form of dissent, including from secular activists like Douma.

Hours after Monday's death sentences were confirmed, Amnesty International Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui said the ruling was "yet another example of the bias of the Egyptian criminal justice system”.

Amnesty said the death sentences were passed at a time when "the case against former president Hosni Mubarak, involving the killing of hundreds of protesters during the uprising, has been dropped”.

In November, a court dropped murder charges against the ex-strongman.

If he walks free it would spur accusations against Sisi that he is reviving the Mubarak era.

Mubarak's sons Alaa and Gamal — symbols of corruption during their father's rule — have also been released pending a retrial, four years after they were arrested in the wake of the uprising.

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