Morsi dies while making court appearance in Egypt

Egypt’s first democratically-elected president was facing host of charges experts believe were politically motivated

ISTANBUL (AA) - Egypt’s first democratically-elected President Mohamed Morsi died Monday during a court appearance to face charges many believed were politically-motivated.

Morsi, 67, was subject to numerous trials on a host of charges since he was ousted and imprisoned in a 2013 military coup.

He faced six charges, including jailbreak, murder, spying for Qatar, spying for Hamas and Hezbollah, insulting the judiciary and involvement in terrorism.

The former president was given at least one lifetime sentence and was added to Egypt’s official list of “terrorists”.

The court was expected to issue final rulings in two other cases against Morsi later this year.

In 2015, he received a death sentence for escaping from prison during Egypt’s 2011 popular uprising.

And then was convicted of “spying” for the Palestinian resistance movement, Hamas, for which he was sentenced to life behind bars.

But in 2016, Egypt’s highest appellate court, overruled the verdicts and ordered two separate retrials.

Morsi, along with several defendants from his now-banned Muslim Brotherhood group, also stood accused of “breaching” Egypt's eastern borderer -- allegedly in cooperation with Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps.

Former President Hosni Mubarak, whose regime was brought down by the 2011 uprising, sparked controversy last December when he gave testimony that 800 Hamas gunmen snuck into Egypt during the uprising and helped break Muslim Brotherhood and Hamas members out of jail – claims the groups deny.

In 2016, the Court of Cassation also upheld a 20-year jail term against Morsi for the murders of protesters in clashes that erupted outside the presidential palace during Morsi’s single year in power.

He was slapped with a life sentence for “spying” for Qatar, along with three years behind bars for “offending Egypt’s judiciary.”

Since Morsi’s ouster in mid-2013, Egypt’s post-coup authorities have waged a relentless crackdown on dissent, killing hundreds of the former president’s supporters and throwing thousands in jail on “violence” charges.

What’s more, shortly after the coup, the Muslim Brotherhood was officially designated a “terrorist organization.”

Morsi and his co-defendants denied the charges they describe as “politically-motivated.”

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