Egypt Brotherhood leaders acquitted of violence charges


An Egyptian court yesterday acquitted Muslim Brotherhood leader Mohamed Badie of "violence" charges, along with a handful of other senior Brotherhood members, in a case that dates back to 2013. Thursday's verdict is the first acquittal for leading Brotherhood members since they were rounded up by the Egyptian authorities following a 2013 military coup led by current President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi.

According to two separate legal sources, the Giza Criminal Court yesterday acquitted Badei, Mohamed al-Beltagy, Issam al-Arian, Basem Odeh and Safwat Hegazi of the charges. The case relates to violence that broke out in the wake of the coup in and around Giza's Al-Istikama Mosque.

Late last year, an Egyptian court sentenced Baie, al-Beltagi and al-Arian to life behind bars in a separate case, while Badie also faces a separate death sentence. All three were convicted earlier of "inciting violence" in 2013 after the army ousted and imprisoned Mohamed Morsi, Egypt's first democratically elected president. Since then, the Egyptian authorities have waged a relentless crackdown on dissent, killing hundreds of Morsi's supporters and throwing thousands behind bars on violence-related charges.