Cairo: An Egyptian court yesterday upheld death sentences against 75 people, in one of the largest mass trials since the 2011 uprising, and gave a five-year jail term to an award-winning photojournalist.
Amnesty International said the sentences, linked to clashes in 2013 between security forces and supporters of deposed Islamist president Mohamed Mursi, amounted to “a mockery of justice”.
Photographer Mahmoud Abu Zeid was among 739 defendants on trial, most of them charged with killing police and vandalising property.
The journalist, widely known as Shawkan, was arrested as he covered the clashes that turned into a bloodbath in which hundreds of demonstrators died.
The court also confirmed death sentences initially passed in July against 75 defendants, including leaders of Mursi’s outlawed Muslim Brotherhood such as Mohamed El Baltagui, Issam Al Aryan and Safwat Hijazi.
Of the 75 defendants facing the death penalty, 44 were in the dock while the rest were tried in absentia. Forty-seven were handed life sentences, while 347 were given 15 years in prison, and 22 minors received 10-year terms.
The court sentenced Mursi’s son, Ossama, to 10 years in jail, while 215 people were handed five-year prison terms.
In a statement, Amnesty condemned death sentences and heavy prison terms after what it called a “disgraceful mass trial”.
The rights watchdog called for a retrial in front of an “impartial court”.
It said the verdicts were “a mockery of jus
tice”, since “not a single police officer has been brought to account”.
Shawkan, who earlier this year received Unesco’s World Freedom Prize, is expected to walk free within days because of time served, his lawyer said.
He was accused of “murder and membership of a terrorist organisation” – charges that can carry the death penalty – but has already spent five years in jail.
Smiling in the dock, the photojournalist made a “V” for victory sign, while his lawyer, Karim Abdelrady, said he would launch a legal bid to have the conviction overturned.
His detention sparked outrage among human rights groups and NGOs who lobbied continuously for his release.
A photo of Shawkan – behind bars with his hands in front of his face mimicking holding a camera – has circulated widely on social media.