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Egypt’s former President Mohammed Morsi dies in court, state TV reports

Mohammed Morsi, Egypt’s former president, died Monday after collapsing during a session in court, state television reported.

The 67-year-old was the country’s first democratically elected president and a member of Egypt’s most powerful Islamist group, the now banned Muslim Brotherhood.

Morsi was on trial for espionage and had just addressed the court, warning he had “many secrets” he could reveal, when he blacked out, reports said. He was taken to a Cairo hospital but could not be revived.

“He was speaking before the judge for 20 minutes then became very animated and fainted,” a judicial source told Agence France-Presse.

The Islamist was democratically elected in 2012, one year after the popular uprising that ended the rule of longtime leader Hosni Mubarak.

Correspondent Ruth Micahaelson in Cairo told DW that authorities were “increasing security” across Egypt amid fears that “violent offshoots of the Muslim Brotherhood may take action folllowing the incident.”
Read more: Is Egypt heading toward another uprising?

Divisive rule

Morsi, often described as a divisive figure, spent just one year in office. He was toppled by the army in July 2013 following mass protests against his government. Critics accused him of disregarding the ideals of the anti-Mubarak uprising and failing to represent all Egyptians.

His then-defense minister and army chief, current President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, took power and was subsequently elected president. Morsi and thousands of other members of the Brotherhood were jailed in the crackdown that followed.

The former president has faced court several times since then on charges that include plotting terror attacks and spying for Iran. Monday’s session was part of a retrial over allegations of espionage connected to Palestinian militant group Hamas. He was also serving a 20-year sentence related to the killing of protesters during 2012 demonstrations, as well as a life sentence for espionage for Qatar. He had denied all charges.

Read more: Can Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi make Egypt great again?

Recent amendments to the constitution mean El-Sissi could stay in power until 2030

Erdogan honors a a ‘martyr’

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who was a Morsi ally, paid tribute to the former leader: “May Allah rest our Morsi brother, our martyr’s soul in peace,” he said.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said the “coup moved him (Morsi) away from the power but his memory will not be erased.”

Qatar’s ruler, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani, a key backer of the Muslim Brotherhood, expressed his “deep sorrow” over Morsi’s death. “I extend to his family and to the Egyptian people brotherly condolences,” Al-Thani wrote on Twitter. 

Mohammed Sudan, a leading Brotherhood member in London, called Morsi’s death a “premeditated murder,” saying the ex-president had been deprived of medical treatment.

“He has been placed behind a glass cage (during trials). No one can hear him or know what is happening to him,” Sudan said. “He hasn’t received any visits for months … He complained before that he doesn’t get his medicine. This is premeditated murder. This is slow death.”

Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director with the Human Rights Watch, tweeted that Morsi’s death was “terrible but entirely predictable” given the government “failure to allow him adequate medical care, much less family visits.”


Born in the northern Sharqiya province in 1951, Morsi studied engineering at Cairo University before taking up a scholarship position in the United States in 1982. He returned to Egypt in 1985 and became a professor at Zagazig University. In the last years of Mubarak’s presidency, he became a senior official in the Muslim Brotherhood.

nm/rt (AFP, AP, dpa)

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Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/egypt-s-former-president-mohammed-morsi-dies-in-court-state-tv-reports/a-49238572?maca=en-rss-en-all-1573-rdf