Egypt court sentences seven to death, five to ten years for killing top police officer

Saturday 24-09-2016 02:29 PM

Major General Nabil Farag after he was killed. REUTERS (archive)

CAIRO, Sept 24 (Aswat Masriya) - An Egyptian criminal court sentenced on Saturday seven people to death and five people to ten years over accusations of killing major general Nabil Farag in 2013.

One defendant was acquitted of all charges.

In July, the court referred all 13 defendants to the Grand Mufti to give his religious opinion after the court handed them death sentences. The case was postponed until today.

The defendants faced an array of charges then including attempted murder, arms possession, resisting and attacking the authorities and using unlicensed communication tools to threaten national security 

They were also charged with forming and managing an illegal terrorist group that aims to carry out unconstitutional activities, prevent state institutions from attending to their duties and attack the freedoms of individuals, among other things.

But the defendants appealed the court’s decision in February 2015.The court then ordered a retrial for all the defendants.

The killing of Farag dates back to September 2013 when authorities had raided Kerdasa neighbourhood to capture fugitives when Farag, Giza's deputy security chief then, was killed and nine others, from the police and army, were wounded. 

The raiding of Kerdasa came a few weeks after protesters attacked Kerdasa police station on August 14, the same day security forces violently dispersed two sit-ins supporting ousted President Mohamed Mursi of the Muslim Brotherhood.

Human Rights Watch said in a report, issued one year after the dispersal, that security forces "killed a minimum of 817 people and more likely at least 1,000."     

The state's National Council for Human Rights, however, said in March 2014 that the death toll was 632, including eight security personnel.

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