Morsi Tried for Jailbreak as Top Egypt Police Officer Murdered

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

Ousted president Mohammed Morsi was defiant as he went on trial Tuesday for a prison break during the 2011 uprising, as a top police official was murdered in another sign of Egypt's instability.

The trial, and other violence in which a police guard was gunned down outside a Cairo church, came a day after the military backed army chief Field Marshall Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, who led Morsi's ouster in July, to run for office in his place.

Morsi, dressed in a white prison uniform, gesticulated angrily from the glass cage in which he and 21 co-defendants were held.

"Who are you," he demanded to know, adding, "Do you know who I am?"

"I am the president of the republic. Who are you? Let me hear your voice; I don't hear you," he shouted defiantly.

In response, a judge said "I am the president of the Cairo Criminal Court."

Among those in the dock was the supreme guide of Morsi's now-banned Muslim Brotherhood, Mohamed Badie.

In all, 131 people are on trial, including dozens of members of the Muslim Brotherhood, the Islamist Palestinian movement Hamas and Hizbullah.

Most of them are being tried in absentia.

Reading the charges, a prosecutor said the "Muslim Brotherhood defendants coordinated with Hamas and Hezbollah to spread chaos and trigger the downfall of the state."

"Eight hundred foreign militants and jihadists infiltrated through illegal tunnels and seized a 60 kilometer (37 mile) border stretch. They attacked security and government buildings and killed many police officers."

He said "three prisons were attacked and more than 50 policemen and prisoners were killed, while more than 20,000 criminals escaped".

The trial was later adjourned until February 22.

In the latest bloodletting, police General Mohamed Saeed was leaving his Cairo home when gunmen on a motorbike opened fire at him, hitting him in the head and the chest before fleeing, security officials said.

Saeed, who was the head of interior minister Mohamed Ibrahim's "technical department," died in hospital.

Hours later gunmen opened fire from a car at policemen guarding a church in the capital, killing one and wounding two. One was arrested, while two others fled on foot.

Since July, Egypt's Christian community has faced several attacks, with pro-Morsi Islamists accusing them of backing his ouster.

Interior minister Ibrahim himself was targeted by a car bomb in September, but he escaped unhurt.

Al-Qaeda inspired group Ansar Beit al-Maqdis, or Partisans of Jerusalem, claimed that attack and has also said it was responsible for some of the deadliest bombings in Egypt since Morsi was deposed.

It said it carried out four bombings against police that killed six people Friday, a day before the third anniversary of the popular uprising that toppled long-time dictator Hosni Mubarak.

Tuesday's shootings reiterate the precarious security situation prevailing across Egypt since then, which has worsened since July.

At least 1,400 people, mostly Morsi supporters, have been killed in a relentless crackdown on Islamists, according to Amnesty International, while scores of policemen and soldiers have also fallen to militant attacks across Egypt.

Since Thursday, at least 13 policemen have been killed across the country, while four soldiers were killed in Sinai, according to an Agence France Presse tally.

Morsi is already on trial for inciting the killings of opposition activists during his presidency and faces two other trials that have yet to begin.

Tuesday's trial date was symbolic as it marked the third anniversary of the prison break from Wadi Natrum jail, which took place as the uprising against Mubarak approached a fever pitch.

Morsi and several Muslim Brotherhood leaders had been arrested by Mubarak's security forces two days earlier to stop them from participating in protests called for January 28, 2011.

That so-called Friday of Rage was a turning point in Mubarak's downfall, as thousands of people attacked and torched police installations, prompting the hated interior ministry's forces to withdraw from the streets.

Morsi, Egypt's first civilian and freely elected president, was ousted following massive protests against his one-year rule.

The wildly popular man behind that, army chief Sisi is now expected to put himself forward as a candidate in the presidential election to be held by mid-April.

To his supporters, Sisi is the best option for ending three years of instability that has helped to wreck the economy.

On Saturday, thousands poured into Cairo's Tahrir Square to back a Sisi candidacy, after he said he required "public demand" to stand in the election.

Comments 9
Default-user-icon AMPeters (Guest) 28 January 2014, 11:19

What do these people see in all this violence? They're ruining it for everybody (who they're also killing).

Missing voiceofreason 28 January 2014, 15:36

These senseless killings are very sad indeed. But then again, so is the senseless killing of 2000 innocent protesters by the oppressive and despotic coup regime. Which do you think started all this mess?

Thumb -phoenix1 28 January 2014, 18:07

He who laughs last will laugh best. Morsi behind bars is a pleasant sight, Moubarak out of jail is even a better sight.

Missing helicopter 28 January 2014, 19:21

"I am the president of the republic. Who are you? Let me hear your voice; I don't hear you," he shouted defiantly.
But he acted as the presiddent of the MB, not the Republic.
My wish is that he and Mubarak are put in the same cell.
My other wish is that Sisi does not run for President and give real Democracy a chance.

Thumb cedre 28 January 2014, 21:01

+1000

Missing helicopter 28 January 2014, 21:58

Thanks cedre

Thumb FlameCatcher 28 January 2014, 19:55

It's funny how members of Hizbullah are also on trial in egypt when they are never caught in the own country.

It's also funny how Hezbollah collaborates with the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt to "spread terror and chaos" :)

Thumb -proudm14- 29 January 2014, 01:01

A farce of a trial.

Thumb ice-man 29 January 2014, 08:09

Sorry guys, Morsi should be jailed and jailed for a long time. There is no place for people like him in Egypt. Sisi is the people's idol. Just give him a chance and you will see. We don't need mols;em brotherhood, HA, or any fanatics in power in any country specially in Egypt.