Former Egyptian president
Mohamed Morsi waves to supporters from the defendants cage during his trial on
the outskirts of Cairo, on June 2, 2015 ©Khaled Desouki (AFP)
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An Egyptian court Tuesday postponed its final ruling on
ousted president Mohamed Morsi, who was sentenced to death along with dozens
more over a mass jailbreak during the 2011 uprising.
The court said that, on June
16, it would also announce its verdict against Morsi and 18 other defendants in
a separate case of espionage.
On May 16, Morsi and more
than 100 others were sentenced to death for plotting jailbreaks and attacks on
police during the uprising more than four years ago that overthrew president
Hosni Mubarak.
The sentence was referred
to the mufti, the government interpreter of Islamic law who plays an advisory
role, and a final ruling had been scheduled for Tuesday.
The mufti's advice is
never made public.
AFP report continues:
Judge Shabaan el-Shamy
said the final ruling in the jailbreak case will now come on June 16, "as
the court has to complete its deliberations on the opinion of the mufti which
was received only this morning."
That ruling can still be
appealed.
Morsi, in a caged dock
and wearing the blue uniform of a convict after already being sentenced in
another case to 20 years for inciting violence, raised his fists in defiance
before being escorted from the courtroom.
- Mass escapes -
Elected in 2012, Morsi
ruled for just a year before mass protests spurred the military to overthrow
him in July 2013.
He was among dozens of
Islamist leaders detained amid a crackdown in which hundreds of his supporters
were killed.
Morsi, 64, was in prison
when the anti-Mubarak uprising erupted on January 25, 2011, having been rounded
up along with other Brotherhood leaders a few days previously.
On January 28, protesters
fuelled by police abuses torched police stations across Egypt, allowing
thousands of prisoners to escape when the force all but collapsed.
Morsi and 34 others were
also tried in a separate case of espionage.
Sixteen have already been
sentenced to death for colluding with foreign powers, the Palestinian Islamist
group Hamas and Iran to destabilise Egypt.
The court has yet to
pronounce verdicts on Morsi and another 18 in this case.
In April, a court
sentenced Morsi to 20 years in a case over abuses against protesters involved
in clashes in 2012 when he was in office.
Since Morsi's overthrow,
the police have largely been rehabilitated in the eyes of the public, with
officials and loyal media blaming the Muslim Brotherhood and foreigners for the
violence of the anti-Mubarak uprising.
The army chief who
overthrew Morsi, Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, was himself elected president last year.
He has pledged to
eradicate the Brotherhood, once Egypt's largest political movement and now
blacklisted as a terrorist group.
Late Monday, two senior
Brotherhood members who had been sentenced to death in absentia were arrested,
the interior ministry said.
Because former spokesman
Mahmud Ghozlan and Abdel Rahman al-Bar were not present in the initial case,
they are now entitled to a new trial.
Officials said they were
arrested in an apartment in the Cairo suburbs.
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