Ousted Egyptian leader Mohamed Morsy struck a defiant tone on the first day of his trial on Monday, chanting "Down with military rule," and calling himself the country's only "legitimate" president.
A protest against the trial of ousted President Mohamed Morsi turned violent in Alexandria after protesters were attacked by army supporters.
Amnesty International has called on Egyptian authorities to ensure that ousted president Mohamed Morsi appears in court and has access to all available resources for his defence. Morsi is due in court on Monday on charges of inciting violence and murder during the December 2012 Ittihadiya presidential palace clashes, which pitted Morsi supporters against his opponents. Another 14 defendants will be tried, including senior Islamists and members of the Muslim Brotherhood's political wing, the Freedom and Justice Party.
The National Alliance in Support of Legitimacy has called for demonstrations in Egypt and outside Egyptian embassies across the world to salute Mohamed Morsy’s "steadfastness" in court on Monday.
CAIRO: Ismail Hafiz, attorney from the South Cairo Prosecution, headed by Sherif Moataz, began questioning Muslim Brotherhood leader Essam el-Erian on inciting to kill demonstrators near the MB headquarters in Moqattam and killing residents in Manial.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs has stressed that former President Mohamed Morsi will receive due process during his upcoming trial. It also highlighted that an “independent ‘investigative judge’” has been appointed to investigate the charges against the former president.
Mohamed al-Damaty, spokesperson of ex-president Mohamed Morsy’s defense team, said former presidential hopeful Mohamed Selim al-Awa is the only lawyer who will defend Morsy during his trial which is scheduled to start on Monday at Tora Police Institute.
The judges presiding in an ongoing trial of Muslim Brotherhood spiritual leader Mohamed Badie and co-defendants on charges of incitement of murder have withdrawn from the case.
There are five scenarios it seems awaiting the trial of toppled President Mohamed Morsy and 14 Muslim Brotherhood leaders, scheduled for next Monday, 4 November, at the low-ranking police officers' institute in Maadi.
CAIRO: Ousted President Mohamed Morsi will have to defend himself in court for his trial, scheduled on November 4, according to Mohamed al-Sisi, member of the Muslim Brotherhood’s legal committee.
CAIRO: The recent arrest of the Muslim Brotherhood’s leading member Essam el-Erian will not affect the roadmap of the Freedom and Justice Party (FJP,) said Abdel Hamid Mahmoud, FJP’s secretary general for middle Cairo and member of the Brotherhood.
Some 20,000 police officers and soldiers will guard the upcoming trial of Egypt's toppled president, an official said Thursday, as Islamist opponents plan massive protests that may spark more turmoil in the country.
Supporters of Egypt's ousted Islamist President Mohamed Morsy called on Thursday for daily protests in the four days before his trial on 4 November, raising the danger of more violence in a crisis that has already cost hundreds of lives.
The Supreme State Security Prosecution, Thursday, ordered the detention of toppled President Mohamed Morsy 15 days pending investigation over charges of espionage.
Salah Ahmed Youssef, a 35-year-old Brotherhood leading figure, died on Wednesday in a detention facility in Beni Mazar, Minya.
Police forces entered the Al-Azhar University campus on Wednesday afternoon after Public Prosecution approved the request of the university head Osama Al-Abd to let security forces intervene and protect lives and public property from attacks on the administrative building and university facilities.
Judge Mohamed Amin Al-Qarmouty of the Cairo Criminal Court withdrew from a case trying Muslim Brotherhood leaders at the beginning of its second hearing on Tuesday, citing “distress” over the decision according to state-owned Al-Ahram.
Giza prosecution decided on Wednesday to put Muslim Brotherhood figure Essam al-Erian into custody for 15 days pending investigations on violence at Bein al-Sarayat and another 15 days pending investigations on Giza Square violence.
Zagazig University saw clashes on Wednesday between students for and against the Muslim Brotherhood. Six students were injured, including two who received gunshot wounds.
Security forces fired teargas and bird-shots to disperse a student protest against the country's interim leadership at Cairo University on Tuesday.
Others
Engineering students at Cairo University begin sit-in over the death of Mohamed Reda, who they say was killed by police on campus