Egypt

Amnesty slams Egypt over mass death sentences

a3c4a54923d80a6e7dd60ca99cd82995_LAmnesty International has censured Egypt for handing down death sentences to more than 500 supporters of the country’s ousted President Mohamed Morsi in a “grotesque” ruling.

According to Press TV, in a statement issued on Monday, the UK-based rights group described the mass death sentences as a “grotesque example of the shortcomings and the selective nature of Egypt’s justice system.”
According to Egyptian media, the Minya Criminal Court sentenced 529 supporters of the former president to death on Monday for their alleged role in the violence that erupted following Morsi’s ouster in July last year.
The mass trial, which was one of the largest in Egypt over the past decades, lasted only two sessions.
Amnesty International Deputy Middle East and North Africa Program Director Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui said, “Imposing death sentences of this magnitude in a single case makes Egypt surpass most other countries’ use of capital punishment in a year.”
According to the Amnesty official, the mass death penalties have been delivered to Morsi’s supporters while Egyptian courts continue to “ignore gross human rights violations by the security forces.”

Back to top button