439 referred to Egyptian military judiciary over post-Rabaa dispersal violence
Aswat Masriya, Saturday 13 Dec 2014
They were referred to military prosecution per a law issued last October


The Egyptian prosecution referred on Saturday 439 defendants to the military judiciary over violence which followed the deadly dispersal of two pro-Mohamed Morsi camps in August 2013, Reuters' Aswat Masriya reported.

Egypt’s top prosecutor referred 139 defendants, believed to be Muslim Brotherhood supporters, to a military tribunal over the killing of a police officer and two policemen, as well as breaking into a police station in Minya and torching it.

The Damanhour general prosecutor referred 300 more to the military prosecution, accusing them of torching the Beheira Governorate building.

Gamal Abdul Hameed, a Minya lawyer following up with the case, told Aswat Masriya the Minya case was referred to the military prosecution based on a decree passed by President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi in October.

Sisi issued on October 27 a new lawwhich refers crimes committed against the state's public and "vital" facilities to the military judiciary.

The law, criticised by human rights organisations for expanding the jurisdiction of military tribunals on civilians, was passed shortly after the death of at least 33 security personnel in militant attacks in Sinai on October 24.

Abdul Hameed said the law can be applied on cases which have not yet been referred to court, even if the events took place before the law’s issuance.

The Cairo Criminal Court referred to a military tribunal on November 16 five students at al-Azhar University accused of torching the university's control room, based on the same law.

Article 204 of Egypt’s new constitution already allows referring civilians to military trials "in cases which represent a direct assault on armed forces institutions, their camps or anything that falls under their authority, alongside assaults on military or border zones, and military institutions, vehicles, weapons, ammunition, documents, secrets, public funds, or factories."

The article was strongly condemned by civil society organisations and a number of political movements before the constitution passed.

No Military Trials for Civilians, a group campaigning against referring civilians to military tribunals, has rallied protests against this article as well as previous legislations which allow the military trial of civilians.

A court in Minya has served over 1000 Muslim Brotherhood supporters preliminary death sentences in March and April. The same court later ratified the death sentences of 220 of the said defendants after consulting the Mufti. The sentenced defendants included Mohamed Badie, the Muslim Brotherhood's supreme guide.

The mass death sentences have also been widely condemned by a number of states, international bodies, and civil society organisations.

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