Egypt postpones final ruling on Morsi death sentence

Court to announce ousted Egyptian president’s fate in 2 weeks as judge considers religious leader’s opinion

Egypt's deposed Islamist president Mohammed Morsi raises his hands from behind the defendant's cage as the judge reads out his verdict sentencing him and more than 100 other defendants to death, at the police academy in Cairo on May 16, 2015. (Khaled Desouki/AFP)
Egypt's deposed Islamist president Mohammed Morsi raises his hands from behind the defendant's cage as the judge reads out his verdict sentencing him and more than 100 other defendants to death, at the police academy in Cairo on May 16, 2015. (Khaled Desouki/AFP)

An Egyptian court Tuesday postponed its final ruling on ousted president Mohammed Morsi, who was sentenced to death along with dozens more over a mass jailbreak during the 2011 uprising.

The court said it would also announce on June 16 its verdict against the ex-president and 18 other defendants in a separate case of espionage.

On May 16, Morsi and more than 100 others were sentenced to death after being convicted of plotting jailbreaks and attacks on police during the uprising more than four years ago that overthrew president Hosni Mubarak.

The death sentence was referred to the mufti, the government’s interpreter of Islamic law who plays an advisory role, and a final ruling had been scheduled for Tuesday.

Judge Shabaan El-Shamy said that the final ruling in the jailbreak case will now come in two weeks.

“The final ruling will be on June 16 as the court has to complete its deliberations on the opinion of the mufti which was received only this morning,” Shamy said on Tuesday.

Elected president in 2012 as the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood’s compromise candidate after its key leader Khairat el-Shater was disqualified, 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 Morsi supporters were killed.

Morsi, 64, was in prison when the anti-Mubarak uprising erupted on January 25, 2011, having been rounded up with other Brotherhood leaders a few days previously.

On January 28 that year, protesters fueled 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 destabilize Egypt.

The court has yet to pronounce verdicts on Morsi and another 18 in this case.

Since Morsi’s overthrow, the police have largely been rehabilitated in the eyes of the public, with officials and loyal media blaming the Brotherhood and foreigners for the violence of the anti-Mubarak uprising.

Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, the army chief who overthrew Morsi, was himself elected president last year.

He has pledged to eradicate the Brotherhood, once Egypt’s largest political movement.

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