KHARTOUM, Sudan — This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.
Mohamed Morsi, Egypt’s first democratically elected president, collapsed and died while on trial in a Cairo courtroom on Monday, Egyptian state television reported.
Mr. Morsi, 67, won Egypt’s first free presidential election in 2012 as a senior leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, but was removed from power a year later in a military takeover.
He was on trial on espionage charges when he fainted and died, Egyptian television said.
Minutes before he collapsed, Mr. Morsi addressed the court from the glass cage that prisoners are kept in, warning that he could reveal “many secrets,” The Associated Press reported, citing judicial sources.
The cause of death was not immediately released, but critics blamed Egyptian authorities for his death.

They said that Mr. Morsi’s poor health was a longstanding issue, and that there had been repeated and public warnings that lack of proper medical care in prison could lead to his death.
“His willful neglect is a case of premeditated murder,” Mohammed Sudan, a prominent Brotherhood member, told Al Araby TV.
His death was a somber milestone in Egypt’s ill-fated democratic transition after the Arab Spring in 2011.
Mr. Morsi’s election was the apex of the Arab Spring uprising and also of the Muslim Brotherhood, a 90-year-old Islamist movement founded in Egypt. Inaugurated seven years ago this month, on June 30, 2012, Mr. Morsi became the first freely elected president in Arab history and the first Islamist to occupy that role.
Many Egyptians hoped the election of Mr. Morsi would make a definitive break with Egypt’s long history of autocracy after decades of harsh and corrupt rule under President Hosni Mubarak. Mr. Mubarak was ousted in the 2011 uprising.
Critics in Washington and around the region raised alarms that Mr. Morsi might seek to impose strict moral codes or theocratic rule. But he surprised many by seeking cordial relations with the United States, recognizing the state of Israel, and developing a warm working relationship with President Barack Obama.
In foreign policy, Mr. Morsi worked with Mr. Obama to help negotiate a peace agreement to end a week of fighting between Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas in the fall of 2012.
But Mr. Morsi’s rule was troubled from the start. He governed clumsily, grappled with a hostile military establishment, and in the summer of 2013 faced a giant popular protest in Tahrir Square, the crucible of the 2011 uprising.
Egypt’s top generals dissolved the country’s first freely elected Parliament just days before Mr. Morsi’s election and claimed most legislative and budgetary powers for themselves.
The protests in Tahrir Square provided the military with an excuse to oust him in 2013.
His defense minister, Gen. Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, seized power on July 3, 2013, and was later elected president. Mr. el-Sisi still rules Egypt with an iron grip, and the country’s democratic hopes have been largely extinguished.
After Mr. Morsi was ousted in 2013, he was convicted of various crimes in politicized trials held under the new military-backed government. He has remained in prison since then.
Some members of Egypt’s opposition blamed Egypt’s prison conditions for Mr. Morsi’s death.
“Morsi was a victim of brutal prison conditions,” said Gamal Eid, a lawyer and human rights advocate, speaking by phone. “His family spent two years in court proceedings trying to win the right to visit him.”
Last year, a panel of British politicians and lawyers reviewing his treatment concluded that Mr. Morsi received “inadequate medical care, particularly inadequate management of his diabetes and inadequate management of his liver disease.”
The panel said the conditions fell below international standards and “would constitute cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment,” Crispin Blunt, a member of Parliament who led the panel, said in a statement on Monday.
“We feared that if Dr. Morsi was not provided with urgent medical assistance, the damage to his health may be permanent and possibly terminal,” Mr. Blunt said. “Sadly, we have been proved right.”
The new government also outlawed the Muslim Brotherhood, calling it a terrorist group. A 90-year-old Islamist movement, the Brotherhood was founded in Egypt in 1928, and its ideas quickly spread to other Muslim-majority countries in the Arab world and beyond.
In April, President Trump pushed to designate the Brotherhood as a terrorist organization under pressure from Mr. el-Sisi, a close ally.
The Pentagon and State Department objected, saying the group does not meet the definition of a terrorist entity.
Officials at those departments also said they feared that designating the Brotherhood as a terrorist group could complicate America’s relations with a host of allied countries in the Middle East with influential Brotherhood-affiliated political parties.
Mr. Morsi’s son Ahmed mourned his father on Facebook, writing: “Father, we will meet again, with God.”
Mr. Morsi grew up in a family of modest means in the Delta city of Sharqiya, Egypt. He earned a Ph.D. in material science from the University of Southern California and later taught at Zagazig Univsersity, near Sharqiya.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/17/world/middleeast/mohamed-morsi-dead.html
2019-06-17 18:11:15Z
52780316277056
Bagikan Berita Ini
0 Response to "Mohamed Morsi, Egypt’s First Democratically Elected President, Dies - The New York Times"
Post a Comment