Relatives and families of members of the Brotherhood are seen outside a court in the south of Cairo. Photos: ReutersRelatives and families of members of the Brotherhood are seen outside a court in the south of Cairo. Photos: Reuters

An Egyptian court yesterday confirmed death sentences against the leader of the Muslim Brotherhood and 182 supporters, in a mass trial of Islamists who ruled Egypt for a year but face a fierce crackdown under the new President, Abdel Fattah al-Sisi.

Mohamed Badie and other defendants were charged in connection with violence that erupted in the southern town of Minya following the ousting of the Brotherhood’s President Mohamed Morsi last July, led by then army chief Sisi.

One police officer was killed in the violence.

The court’s decision came two months after it referred the case against Badie, general guide of the now outlawed Brotherhood, and 682 other defendants to a top religious authority, the first step to imposing a death penalty.

Those preliminary sentences triggered outrage among Western governments and rights groups, with the US and EU both saying they were appalled by the rulings.

Egypt, the biggest Arab state, which controls the strategic Suez Canal, has been among the largest recipients of US military and economic aid since its 1979 peace treaty with US ally Israel

Since Morsi’s overthrow, which was followed by protests by his supporters, hundreds of Islamist protesters have been killed and thousands jailed in a crackdown by security forces. Five hundred army and police officers have also been killed.

Sisi, who won a presidential election last month, said in the run-up to the vote that the Brotherhood – Egypt’s oldest and most organised political group – was finished and would not exist under his rule.

Amnesty International described the verdicts as “the latest example of the Egyptian judiciary’s bid to crush dissent”.

There was no immediate reaction on the ruling from the Brotherhood, whose members are either in jail or on the run.

Outside the Minya court compound, around 200 people, mostly relatives of defendants that were freed, gathered to celebrate the ruling. “Long live justice, long live Sisi,” they chanted.

Out of a total 683 defendants, around 100 are in detention and the rest were tried in absentia. Four were jailed for life, while 496 were acquitted, according to judiciary sources. All verdicts can be appealed before a higher court.

“Those rulings are a continued farce,” prominent Egyptian human rights activist and lawyer Gamal Eid said yesterday.

“And the state is still insisting that the judiciary is independent. I don’t know how we can believe that when we see rulings like that. It is against logic and common sense. It is a joke,” he said.

The US has said it would be unconscionable for Egypt to carry out mass death sentences against the Brotherhood and that Cairo’s actions would have consequences for resumption of suspended US aid.

US Secretary of State John Kerry, who was due to tour the Middle East, is expected to pay a brief visit to Egypt today, according to local Egyptian media reports.

Egypt, the biggest Arab state, which controls the strategic Suez Canal, has been among the largest recipients of US military and economic aid since its 1979 peace treaty with US ally Israel.

Some of that support was put on hold after Morsi’s overthrow, the latest round in a decades-old struggle between Egyptian authorities and the Islamist movement.

The 70-year-old Badie was first jailed under President Gamal Abdel Nasser nearly 50 years ago, alongside the Brotherhood’s then leader and ideologue Sayyid Qutb who was executed in 1966.

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