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Egypt Court Frees 15 Members of Muslim Brotherhood

The Muslim Brotherhood calls for the establishment of an Islamic state, but rejects the use of violence.

CAIRO, August 5 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - An Egyptian court on Sunday, August 4 freed 15 members of the Muslim Brotherhood who have served most of their prison sentences, including a senior member, a former MP and several university professors, legal sources said.

“This group, which includes university professors and a former deputy, is part of the elite of Egyptian society,” administrative court judge Farouk Abdel Bar was quoted by the sources as saying at the hearing, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.

“The freeing of a convict is a right if they have served the majority of their prison sentences and have demonstrated good conduct,” the judge was quoted as saying.

“The fact they were condemned by the high military court does not mean they are a danger to society,” he said in ordering the interior ministry to release them from prison.

The 15, including an important figure in the Muslim Brotherhood movement, lawyer Mokhtar Nouh, were sentenced in November 2000 to terms of between three and five years for “belonging to an illegal organization”.

Under Egyptian law, the interior minister can release prisoners early because of good behavior. But political prisoners have never previously been granted this right, instead being forced to serve their full sentences.

Lawyer Abdel Moneim Abdel Maksoud said the decision concerning the 15 Muslim Brotherhood members could create an example for future cases involving political prisoners.

Abdel Maksoud said, “This is the first time a verdict of an (administrative) court grants those accused in political cases the right to be treated like regular prisoners,” Jordan Times reported.

Despite the verdict, the 15 have not yet been released, as the interior ministry is expected to appeal the decision. If its bid fails, the ministry can appeal again to a higher court.

They made a collective request to the interior minister in February to be freed because they had served the bulk of their sentences.

On Tuesday, July 30, 16 members of the Muslim Brotherhood were sentenced by a military court to between three and five years in jail for trying to revive the movement in order to seize power.

The verdict, it said, was issued after “the security services unleashed a vast campaign of arrests to silence voices supporting the Palestinian cause, rejecting the American policy against Arabs and Muslims...” 

The Muslim Brotherhood is the oldest Islamist group in Egypt and calls for the establishment of an Islamic state, but rejects the use of violence.

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