Four Egyptian rights groups denounced the military trials of civilians accused of attacking soldiers on Monday, saying the army had convicted more than 60 people since president Mohammed Mursi's ouster. The NGOs urged interim president Adly Mansour, who was appointed by the army following Mursi's removal, to "immediately amend the law in order to prohibit trials of civilians by military tribunals".
It's safe for NGOs to pop up in Cairo now. It wasn't so safe for them when Mursi was in charge. They don't seem to get that... | The respected Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights, the "No to military trials of civilians" campaign launched in 2011 after the fall of Hosni Mubarak, and two other groups also demanded a new trial for 52 Islamists sentenced by the military last week to prison terms.
On Tuesday, a military court handed down a life sentence to a Muslim Brotherhood member and sentenced 51 more to jail for attacking soldiers in the city of Suez. It delivered the verdict after just three hearings.
How many hearings did they need? | The verdict came exactly two months after the July 3 ouster of Mursi, who has been held at an unknown location ever since.
On Tuesday, Mansour in a television interview said that "no civilian was recently tried by a military tribunal".
But local NGOs say there have been at least two military trials, with a total of 10 civilians sentenced to two years in prison in separate hearings for carrying out attacks on troops on July 24. |