An
Egyptian court has sentenced 68 people to up to 15 years in prison over
protest clashes, in the latest mass sentencing of Muslim Brotherhood
supporters.
They were accused of taking part in street violence in October 2013
in which more than 50 demonstrators were shot dead in Cairo during
clashes with police.
The Cairo court handed down 15-year sentences to 63 defendants and 10
years to five others, judicial sources and state media said.
Police have cracked down harshly on supporters of ousted Islamist
president Mohamed Morsi since his ouster by the military in July 2013,
killing hundreds in clashes and arresting thousands.
Dozens of policemen have also died.
Courts have sentenced hundreds of protesters to death or prison.
In another trial on Tuesday, a Cairo court sentenced nine activists
to two years for taking part in an unauthorised gathering at which they
called for a ban on demonstrations to be repealed, a judicial source
said.
Three of them were from the April 6 movement that spearheaded the
2011 revolt that toppled strongman Hosni Mubarak, and the rest were
“independent” activists, an official in the movement, Amr Ali, told AFP
news agency.
Last week, another court sentenced 86 people to up to 15 years in prison on charges relating to pro-Morsi protests.
Morsi himself is on trial in several cases and faces a death sentence if convicted of espionage and “terrorism” related charges.
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