Vital figures of 2011 Egypt uprising jailed

Update: 2013-12-24 00:01 GMT
Ahmed Maher, Ahmed Douma and Mohamed Adel are symbols of the protest movement that ignited the revolt against President Hosni Mubarak. Their sentences include prison labour and fines of 50,000 Egyptian pounds each.

As the verdict was read, the three chanted “Down, down with military rule!” from the cage where defendants stand in Egyptian courts. The session, held at a police facility on the outskirts of Cairo, was attended by several European diplomats.

The case stems from protests called in defiance of a law passed by the army-backed government in November that requires police permission for demonstrations. It was the first verdict handed down under the new law. The defendants faced charges of protesting without permission and assaulting police.

Already pressing a fierce crackdown against the Muslim Brotherhood movement of deposed President Mohamed Morsi, the authorities have arrested a number of secular activists in recent weeks for breaches of the new protest law.

Critics see it as an attempt to stifle the kind of street activism commonplace since the 2011 uprising as the government proceeds with a new political transition plan. The next step is a mid-January referendum on a new constitution.

During Mubarak’s 30 years in power, most protests were crushed by a powerful security apparatus that has reasserted itself since Morsi’s removal.

“We are starting to be seen as enemies of the state. It is not going to be the last time,” said Sally Toma, a leading activist, reacting to the verdicts. “They will try to kill everything that this revolution stood for.”

SHAFIK CLEARED, MORSI CHARGED

Morsi was removed by the army on July 3 after mass protests against his rule. The military has set a course for new elections next year which army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi is tipped to win, if he runs.
The Muslim Brotherhood, the country’s best-organised party, has been driven underground in a crackdown that has killed hundreds of Islamists in the streets and jailed thousands more. The courts have been on the front line of Egypt’s political struggle since Mubarak’s downfall. The veteran autocrat and his aides were put on trial for an array of charges which, for the most part, have not stuck. Following Morsi’s removal, Mubarak was released from prison, though he still faces retrial.

Reflecting how the balance of power has shifted, courts last week cleared the way for Mubarak’s last prime minister, Ahmed Shafik, to return to Egypt from self-imposed exile by shelving remaining corruption cases against him.

And the public prosecutor’s office ordered Morsi and other leading Islamists to stand trial in two separate cases accused of terrorism and conspiring with foreigners against Egypt, charges which can carry the death penalty.

The youth activist movement spearheaded by the likes of Maher, Douma and Adel has faced legal action by the state throughout the last three years, including the year of Morsi’s presidency that was itself accused of rights violations. Douma was jailed for six months for calling Morsi a criminal, and in the final weeks of the Islamist’s rule a group of 12 activists were referred to trial on charges of inciting violence near the Muslim Brotherhood’s headquarters.

They included Alaa Abdel Fattah, a prominent blogger who is also in detention awaiting trial for violating the protest law.

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