Ousted
Egypt president to be tried over conspiracy
Egypt's top prosecutor referred toppled Islamist
President Mohammed Morsi to trial Wednesday for conspiring with the Palestinian
group Hamas, Lebanon's Hezbollah and others to carry out a campaign of violence
in the Sinai Peninsula and beyond to destabilize the country following his
ouster.
Prosecutors claim that while president, Morsi and his aides
revealed state secrets to the militant groups and to Iran's Revolutionary
Guard. Morsi and 35 others, including the Muslim Brotherhood's top three leaders,
are also accused of sponsoring terrorism and carrying out combat training and
other acts to undermine Egypt's stability.
The charges, which refer to incidents as far back as 2005, carry
the death penalty.
Mohammed el-Damaty, a defense lawyer for Muslim Brotherhood
members, said the lawyers have not attended any of their clients'
interrogations and have no idea about the details of the charges.
No trial date has been set in the new case. Morsi is already on
trial on charges of inciting the murder of his opponents while in office. Morsi
was removed from office in July by the military, following days of mass
protests demanding he step down. Morsi spent months in an undisclosed location
before he appeared in court to face the incitement charges in November. That
trial resumes in January.
In a statement Wednesday, prosecutors said their new
investigation showed that the Brotherhood's international branch has carried
out violent acts in Egypt to create chaos. Prosecutors claimed the Brotherhood
prepared a terrorist plot that involved smuggling weapons into the country and
smuggling their own members into the Gaza Strip to receive military training
from Hezbollah and Iran's Revolutionary Guard to carry out operations in the
Sinai.
Prosecutors said their investigation that showed the Brotherhood
received funds from foreign countries. Investigators claim the plan began as
earlier as 2005 and put it into effect in 2011 during the turmoil that
accompanied the uprising against former President Hosni Mubarak.
Morsi's senior presidential aides, also members of the
Brotherhood, revealed state secrets by emails to group members abroad, as well
as to Hamas, Iran's Revolutionary Guard and Hezbollah, prosecutors claim. The
prosecutors said Morsi was aware of the leaks.
Morsi is already under investigation over allegations he and the
Brotherhood worked with the Palestinian militant group Hamas on a prison break
that freed him and other members of the group during Egypt's 2011 uprising.
That attack killed 14 inmates.

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