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December 27, 2013

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16 Brotherhood supporters detained on terror charges

Egypt escalated its crackdown on the Muslim Brotherhood yesterday, detaining at least 16 of the group’s supporters on charges of belonging to a terrorist organization the day after it was declared one by the government.

The activists were held in the Nile Delta province of Sharkiya on suspicion of “promoting the ideology of the Muslim Brotherhood group, distributing its leaflets, and inciting violence against the army and police,” the state news agency said.

The government declared the Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist group on Wednesday in response to a suicide attack a day earlier that killed 16 in the Nile Delta, blaming the group for the bombing. The Brotherhood condemned the attack.

Interior Ministry spokesman Hani Abdel Latif told state TV yesterday that anyone taking part in Brotherhood protests would be jailed for five years. “The sentence could be death for those who lead this organization,” he added.

Earlier in the day a bomb explosion in Cairo wounded five people, and Latif said a second similar home-made device was found nearby and dismantled.

The government did not provide evidence to back up the charge that the Brotherhood had staged the Nile Delta attack in Mansoura, north of Cairo, which was claimed by the Sinai-based radical Islamist group Ansar Bayt al-Maqdis.

Ansar Bayt al-Maqdis has taken responsibility for several other major bombings, including a failed attempt to kill the interior minister in September.

The Brotherhood’s Islamist allies responded defiantly to the cabinet decision, vowing to continue the protests it has staged against the army since the overthrow of president Mohammed Morsi. “The putchists are a terrorist organization. The Brotherhood are peaceful patriots,” they said.

Wednesday’s move marked an escalation in the government’s campaign to suppress the Islamist movement that propelled Morsi to the presidency 18 months ago but has been driven underground since the army toppled him in July after protests against him.

 




 

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