An Egyptian court has pronounced
death sentences on ousted president Mohammed Morsi and more than 100
other people over a mass prison break in 2011.
Morsi is already serving a 20-year prison term for ordering the arrest and torture of protesters while in power. Egypt's religious authorities will now have to give their opinion before the sentence can be carried out.
Morsi's supporters from his Muslim Brotherhood movement have described the charges against him as "farcical". He was deposed by the military in July 2013 following mass street protests against his rule.
Since then, the authorities have banned the Muslim Brotherhood and arrested thousands of his supporters.
In
a separate case on Saturday, an Egyptian court banned hardcore football
fan clubs known as the Ultras, who played a leading role in protests
during the 2011 uprising against then-president Hosni Mubarak.
Morsi raised both fists in defiance as the sentences were given.
Morsi,
who escaped from Wadi Natroun prison in January 2011, was accused of
colluding with foreign militants in a plot to free Islamists during the
mass prison breaks.
Many of his 104 co-defendants were Palestinians accused of being members of militant group Hamas, and were charged in absentia.
The
court also issued rulings on another case, sentencing 16 Muslim
Brotherhood members, including deputy leader Khairat al-Shater, to death
on spying charges.
Morsi, who also faces espionage charges, will be issued a verdict in that case at a later date.
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