Court overturns Mursi’s death sentence, orders retrial

Former Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi greets his lawyers and people from behind bars at a court wearing the red uniform of a prisoner sentenced to death, during his court appearance with Muslim Brotherhood members on the outskirts of Cairo, Egypt, in this June 21, 2015 file photo. (REUTERS)

CAIRO: Egypt’s Court of Cassation on Tuesday overturned a death sentence against deposed President Mohammed Mursi of the Muslim Brotherhood and ordered a retrial.
Mursi was sentenced to death in June 2015 in connection with a mass jail break during Egypt’s 2011 uprising.
Mursi, democratically elected after the revolution, was overthrown in mid-2013 by then-Gen. Abdel Fattah El-Sisi, now the president, following mass protests against his rule, and immediately arrested.
Tuesday’s court ruling means that Mursi is no longer under threat of execution, although he is serving three lengthy jail sentences.
Abdel-Moneim Abdel-Maksoud, the Brotherhood’s lawyer, said the Court of Cassation had applied the law correctly.
“The ruling was expected because (Mursi’s conviction) was legally flawed, and we are waiting for the retrial.”
Mursi is already serving a 20-year prison sentence for a conviction arising from the killings of protesters during demonstrations in 2012. He has also been sentenced to 40 years on charges of spying for Qatar and to life imprisonment on charges of spying for the Palestinian Hamas group.
The government deems the Brotherhood, Egypt’s oldest opposition movement dating back decades, a terrorist group. The Brotherhood says it is committed to peaceful activism.
Activists and rights groups at home and abroad have said many or all the mass trials have been legally flawed. The Egyptian government says the judiciary is independent and that it never intervenes in its work.