An
Egyptian court upheld death sentences on Wednesday against 12 Muslim
Brotherhood supporters convicted of killing a police officer last year,
judicial sources said.
Judge Moataz Khafagy first passed the
sentence against the men in June and referred the case to the country’s
highest Sunni Muslim authority for approval, which is required before
any execution can be carried out, Reuters reports.
The men were charged in connection with
violence that erupted when police stormed the town of Kerdasa near Cairo
in September and arrested dozens of supporters of ousted President
Mohamed Mursi.
Major General Nabil Farag was shot dead when security forces exchanged fire with militants in the area.
A month earlier security forces had
crushed two pro-Mursi protest camps in Cairo and killed hundreds of his
supporters. Then-army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi launched his crackdown
on Islamists after ousting Mursi last year following mass protests
against his rule.
Sisi, who took office as president in June, has said the Brotherhood would cease to exist in his presidency.
Seven of those sentenced to death were
present in court when the judge read the ruling. The remaining five are
on the run. The defendants still have the right to appeal the ruling.
Nine other defendants were sentenced to life in prison, the judicial sources said.