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Egypt charges ex-President Morsy with passing state secrets to Qatar

September 06, 2014 04:10 pm | Updated December 04, 2021 10:58 pm IST - CAIRO

In this May 8, 2014 photo, Egypt's ousted Islamist President Mohamed Morsy sits in a defendant cage in the Police Academy courthouse in Cairo.

Egypt charged ousted president Mohamed Morsy and several other people on Saturday with endangering national security by leaking state secrets and sensitive documents to Qatar, dealing a further blow to his outlawed Muslim Brotherhood.

Relations between Qatar, a Gulf Arab state, and Egypt have been icy since July 2013, when then-Egyptian Army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi toppled Mr. Morsy after mass unrest against his rule.

Qatar had supported Mr. Morsy, who is already in jail along with thousands of Brotherhood members, many of whom have been sentenced to death on separate charges.

Security sources had said last month that Egypt was investigating Mr. Morsy in connection with documents they said were leaked to Qatar and its satellite news channel Al Jazeera.

The Cairo public prosecutor's office said on Saturday its secret investigation had unearthed enough evidence of espionage to charge Mr. Morsy in a criminal court.

“The inquiries... exposed humiliating facts and the extent of the largest conspiracy and treason carried out by the terrorist Brotherhood organisation against the nation through a network of spies,” it said in a lengthy statement.

The statement said Mr. Morsy and two of his top secretaries abused their positions to slip documents from Egypt's security agencies to Qatari intelligence and Al Jazeera.

It said some of those documents exposed the location of and weapons held by the Egyptian armed forces and detailed the country's foreign and domestic policies.

The Qatari Foreign Ministry in Doha did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the accusations. Al Jazeera, which has been banned from Egypt, has denied any bias in reporting events there or any role in aiding the Brotherhood.

It was not immediately possible to obtain a Brotherhood comment as most of the group's leaders are in Egyptian jails.

Field Marshal Sisi, who went on to win a presidential election in May, promised during his campaign that the Muslim Brotherhood would cease to exist under his rule.

Egyptian security forces killed hundreds of Brotherhood supporters during protests against Mr. Morsy's ouster and thousands of others have been jailed.

Egypt’s oldest Islamist movement, once among Egypt's most formidable political forces, has been branded a terrorist group and its assets have been seized by the state.

The Brotherhood formally renounced violence as a means of political change decades ago and has denied any role in more recent bloodshed.

While Field Marshal Sisi has taken the reins of power, Mr. Morsy has languished in jail on charges of inciting violence and various other offences.

Egypt has jailed three Al Jazeera journalists for up to 10 years on charges of aiding “a terrorist group” by broadcasting misinformation that harmed national security. Al Jazeera has said the charges are baseless.

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