An Egyptian military court Tuesday sentenced 11 members of the Muslim Brotherhood to life in prison after accusing them of "aggression" against the army in the city of Suez last month.
An Egyptian military court Tuesday sentenced 11 members of the Muslim Brotherhood to life in prison after accusing them of "aggression" against the army in the city of Suez last month.
In the first such sentencing since the July 3 ouster of former president Mohammad Mursi, the military court also sentenced 45 Brotherhood members to five years in jail while acquitting eight others.
The Brotherhood members were accused of shooting and using violence against the army in Suez on August 14 following a military crackdown on Mursi's supporters in Cairo.
The military court delivered the verdict on Tuesday after holding two hearings against the accused on August 24 and 26.
The military had also accused the defendants of carrying guns and throwing molotovs at soldiers.
On August 14 the military carried out a deadly crackdown on Mursi supporters in the Cairo's Rabaa al-Adawiya and Nahda squares, killing hundreds. It was the deadliest such crackdown in Egypt's recent history.
Since August 14 Egyptian authorities have carried out a relentless crackdown against the Muslim Brotherhood in which more than 1,000 people have been killed and some 2,000 members of the Brotherhood arrested.
The supreme guide of the Brotherhood, Mohamed Badie, has also been arrested, while Mursi has been in custody since his ouster.
In Sinai, the Egyptian army carried out an extensive military operation against the militant groups, killing 8 and wounding 15 of their members.
The operation further targeted the weaponry and explosives stores as well as the hideouts of the insurgents.
The military also arrested two members of the Mujahidin Shura Council and sent more reinforcements to fight the insurgents.