Egypt court to rule in Mohamed Morsi’s Qatar espionage case today

Cairo criminal court is set to issue a verdict on Saturday in the “Qatar espionage” case where former President Mohamed Morsi is accused along with 10 others.

Six of the defendants in the case were referred to the Grand Mufti last month to give his religious opinion after the court handed them death sentences.

The ruling for the rest of the defendants in the case, including Morsi, has been postponed to Saturday, June 18.

Morsi, who was ousted in July 2013, and the rest of the defendants, including two of his aides, are accused of leaking classified national intelligence to the Qatari intelligence.

The six defendants who received preliminary death sentences include a documentary filmmaker Ahmed Afifi, a flight attendant Mohamed Kilany and a teaching assistant in the Misr University for Sciences and Technology Ahmed Ismail.

Asmaa al-Khatb, reporter for RASSD news network, along with Alaa Sablan and Ibrahim Helal, who both work for Qatari Al Jazeera channel, also received death sentences.

Egypt’s then top prosecutor, Hisham Barakat, referred all the defendants to court in September of 2014.

The prosecution accused them of leaking the intelligence with the help of eight “spies” and in exchange for a million dollars, adding that they were carrying out the instructions of the “terrorist” Muslim Brotherhood international organization.

Since his ouster, Morsi was featured in several trials where he faced an array of charges including other espionage charges, inciting to kill protesters outside the presidential palace during his tenure, insulting the judiciary and escaping prison during the January 2011 uprising.

The former president received a death sentence for escaping Wadi al-Natroun prison, a life sentence in another espionage case and a 20-years prison sentence for inciting and demonstrating violence in the “Presidential Palace Clashes” case.

Morsi is still being tried for insulting the judiciary.

Morsi, who became Egypt’s president in June 2012 after the first democratic elections in the country, was eventually ousted at the hands of the military following mass protests against his rule, after a year in power.

Egyptian-Qatari ties have been strained since Morsi’s military ouster, with the authorities replacing Morsi’s regime viewing Qatar as a Brotherhood sympathizer, using the Qatari Al Jazeera network for this aim.

Source: Aswat Masriya

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