Brotherhood leader to be tried for insulting judges

Case against Mahdi Akef stems from statements made in April, when he called the judiciary sick and corrupt during the power struggle between Mursi and courts.

By (AP)

  • Follow us on
  • google-news
  • whatsapp
  • telegram

Published: Sun 13 Oct 2013, 10:38 PM

Last updated: Thu 20 Feb 2020, 2:48 PM

A former leader of the Muslim Brotherhood was referred on Saturday to trial on charges of insulting the judiciary, Egyptian officials said.
Speaking on condition of anonymity, they said 85-year-old Mahdi Akef was referred to a criminal court in Cairo but no date had been set for his trial.
Akef's arrest came as a part of the interim government's wider crackdown on Islamist leaders and Muslim brotherhood supporters following the July 3 ouster of President Mohammed Mursi. Akef, along with other top leaders of the Brotherhood, is also accused of inciting violence in a court case that will resume later this month.
Around 2,000 members of the Brotherhood and other Islamist groups are also being held in prison pending investigation on a variety of accusations, mostly involving inciting violence.
The new case stems from statements Akef made in April, when he called the judiciary "sick" and "corrupt" during the height of a power struggle between Mursi and the courts.
At the time, Akef defended an Islamist-backed draft law that could have forced out 3,500 of Egypt's approximately 13,000 judges and prosecution officials by lowering the retirement age to 60 from 70. He was one of the first Brotherhood leaders to state that the new law could force out such a large number, about a third of the sitting judges and prosecutors, in what many saw as a deliberate threat leveled by the group.
Islamist backers accused the judiciary of being dominated by former regime loyalists, while liberals saw the draft law as an attempt to pack it with their allies in place of the retiring judges.
Akef later tried to distance himself from the remarks, saying the recorded media statements were edited. He later said he respected the judiciary.
Mursi, detained in an unknown location since his ouster, is himself being investigated and could face trial on accusations of insulting judges. In a public speech during his term in office, Mursi accused a few judges by name of taking part in election rigging under the previous regime.
The judiciary had dealt the Islamist camp several setbacks before Mursi's ouster. Courts dissolved the Islamist-majority lower house of parliament last year, saying the law governing its election was invalid. This year, a court forced a delay in elections for a new parliament when it ruled that a new election law had to be reviewed by the Supreme Constitutional Court.
On the other hand, Mursi infuriated many in the judiciary in November by issuing decrees that made his decisions immune from judicial challenge for a time, protected a constitutional assembly from being dissolved by the courts and unilaterally installed a new prosecutor, seen as a loyalist.


More news from