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Egypt bans Muslim Brotherhood

Arab World Materials 27 December 2013 09:56 (UTC +04:00)
Egypt widens crackdown on Muslim Brotherhood
Egypt bans Muslim Brotherhood

Egyptian authorities have arrested 23 Muslim Brotherhood supporters on accusations of belonging to a terrorist organisation, a day after the country's interim government blacklisted the group Al JAzeera reported.

The people arrested on Thursday were accused of passing out leaflets in support of the Brotherhood, promoting the group's ideology, and inciting violence against the Egyptian security services, according to Egypt's state media agency, MENA.

Later on Thursday, one person was killed as student supporters of the Brotherhood clashed with residents of a Cairo district where they were protesting.

"Egypt will stand firmly in confronting terrorism and the people will never be afraid as long as the army is present," said Egyptian army chief General Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, during an army graduation ceremony on Thursday in Cairo.

The arrests come only a day after Egypt's interim government declared the Muslim Brotherhood, to which deposed former President Mohamed Morsi belongs, a terrorist group.

The designation means anyone accused of taking part in pro-Muslim Brotherhood rallies, possession of the group's literature, or supporting the group "verbally or in writing" could be sentenced to five years in prison, the Interior Ministry said.

US Secretary of State John Kerry expressed concern on Thursday over Egypt's intensified pursuit of the Muslim Brotherhood in a phone call with his counterpart in Cairo Nabil Fahmy.

Kerry condemned a suicide bombing in Mansoura on Tuesday and Thursday's bus bombing in Cairo, State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said in a statement.

The top American diplomat also "expressed concern about the interim Egyptian government's December 25 terrorist designation of the Muslim Brotherhood, and recent detentions and arrests," Psaki said.

The Brotherhood still organises almost daily protests demanding Morsi's return, nearly six months after he was overthrown following widespread popular protests.

Life imprisonment

Al Jazeera's Peter Greste, reporting from Cairo, said that anyone convicted of being a senior Muslim Brotherhood member, or of financing or providing information to the group, could face life imprisonment.

"The effect of this is really quite profound. It's not just the people that are actively promoting Brotherhood ideology. There are a lot of charities that the Brotherhood also supports who work right across the poorest areas of Egypt, and those groups have already started closing down their operations," Greste said.

The arrests on Thursday also come after two bombings rocked Egypt earlier in the week.

On Tuesday, a blast at a police station in the Nile Delta city of Mansoura killed 14 people and wounded many others, while another bomb exploded near a bus in Cairo on Thursday, wounding five.

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