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This woman holds a poster of ousted Egyptian President Morsi that read "Mohammed Morsi is the only democratic president" during a demonstration in Pakistan yesterday. (AP Photo/Anjum Naveed) (AP Photo/Anjum Naveed)

Egypt's Morsi to stand trial for 'inciting murder'

The former leader is set to stand trial along with 14 other suspects in his Muslim Brotherhood movement.

OUSTED EGYPTIAN PRESIDENT Mohamed Morsi is to stand trial in a criminal court for “incitement to murder”, state television has reported.

It said the former leader would stand trial along with 14 other suspects in his Muslim Brotherhood movement on charges of “incitement to murder and violence” in December 2012 when deadly clashes broke out between his supporters and opponents outside the presidential palace.

Already accused of crimes related to his 2011 escape from prison, Morsi has been held at a secret location since his ouster by the army on July 3.

The co-defendants in the trial include senior Brotherhood figures Mohamed al-Beltagi and leaders such as Essam el-Erian, deputy head of the Freedom and Justice Party, the Brotherhood’s political wing.

Last December, thousands of demonstrators gathered in front of the presidential palace in Cairo to protest against a presidential decree that expanded Morsi’s powers and an Islamist-drafted constitution.

A court in July ordered Morsi’s detention for questioning over alleged ties with Palestinian militants in prison breaks and attacks on police.

Egypt has pressed a fierce campaign against the Brotherhood since the former president’s ouster and effectively decapitated the Islamist group by arresting its supreme guide Mohamed Badie in late August.

Authorities have also arrested more than 2,000 Brotherhood figures since Morsi’s ouster.

Brotherhood defendants, including Badie, were due to appear in court on August 25 but kept away for what authorities said were security reasons. A new hearing is to take place on October 29.

Badie and his deputies Khairat al-Shater and Rashad al-Bayoumi face charges related to the deaths of protesters who stormed the Brotherhood’s Cairo headquarters on June 30.

Three other Brotherhood members are standing trial with the leaders, accused of carrying out the murders at the end of June.

Egypt’s interim president Adly Mansour announced a 50-member panel yesterday to draw up a revised constitution but without the inclusion of the Muslim Brotherhood which has declined to take part.

The Muslim Brotherhood has lost its ability to bring people out in large numbers because of the sweeping arrests that have netted its top leaders.

On Friday several thousand Egyptians protested in Cairo in support of Morsi, far fewer than had been hoped for by harried Islamists, who had called for mass rallies.

Morsi, Egypt’s first democratically elected president, served for only a year before the military ousted him in the popularly backed coup in July.

- AFP, 2013

Egypt detains former president Morsi as five killed in further clashes>

Egypt’s ousted leader Hosni Mubarak released from prison>

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29 Comments
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    Mute Páid Ó Donnchú
    Favourite Páid Ó Donnchú
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    May 30th 2012, 9:35 AM

    Greece is a democracy. They have had loads of elections, and continue to elect politicians who don’t collect tax, and provide soft state jobs. Tick Tock.

    124
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    Mute Teresa Scanlon
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    May 30th 2012, 10:29 AM

    Doesn’t Ireland provide soft state jobs too!!!!

    61
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    Mute Patrick Moran
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    May 30th 2012, 9:35 AM

    This makes the EU sound like a Mafia organisation. Once you’re in you can’t get out again or we’ll get your family and destroy everything that’s important to you. Talk about holding a gun to someone’s head !

    114
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    Mute Danny D
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    May 30th 2012, 10:34 AM

    Any family would change into Mafia, once you splash your own cash all over the place, then borrow billions and demand that it’s being forgotten …

    35
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    Mute Kerry Blake
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    May 30th 2012, 9:36 AM

    Hm bankers issuing warnings? Where were they when Greece was digging themselves into this pit?

    97
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    Mute Fagan's
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    May 30th 2012, 10:48 AM

    The head of the Greek Bank was taken in to the ECB after the digging of the hole, then under pressure from Brussels he was made PM of Greece’s technocratic Govt.

    17
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    Mute Damocles
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    May 30th 2012, 9:35 AM

    No mention of rains of fire or the four horsemen of the Acropolis?

    92
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    Mute Sheila Byrne
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    May 30th 2012, 9:37 AM

    Very daunting and scary for the people of Greece. Some might say it’s scaremongering and propaganda but sadly it may be true? If they could get the terms of the EU-IMF brought down it may help.

    Good luck everyone with your voting tomorrow. A scary day for us! Everyone should use their vote, whether it’s a ‘Yes’ or a ‘No’. Either way, whoever doesn’t vote can’t bitch and complain or have an opinion!

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    Mute Rob Power
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    May 30th 2012, 10:03 AM

    Unless of course you work 200km away from home. Then you could probably bitch a little about having it on a Thursday.

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    Mute Sheila Byrne
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    May 30th 2012, 10:50 AM

    @ Rob Power

    Agree with you. Typical of every Government to have it on a Thursday. I believe one of the reasons for that is, that people counting and sorting votes take most of Friday and Saturday to count and re count votes. By Saturday, supervisors should have an idea of how the votes are going.

    This is true of a general election, but one would imagine that it being a referendum of a “Yes or No” shouldn’t take so long so a Referendum should take place on a Friday.

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    Mute Rob Power
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    May 30th 2012, 11:29 AM

    Well, it’s not typical of every government, as it was only started during this govt term (with Aras11).

    I don’t think any consideration should be given to counting of votes when deciding when to set polling day. The overriding concern should always be how to allow the maximum number of people get to the booths on the day.

    18
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    Mute Paul
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    May 30th 2012, 12:23 PM

    Home is where you live, not where you were born. It’s very easy to update the register of electors, I’ve done it several times. Voting has almost always been on a Thursday, it’s a hangover from British elections which are also on a Thursday. They should be at the weekend though so as to avoid school closures, added inconvenience for parents and those who for some reason choose to vote 200km away rather than filling out a form in their local council office to move their vote to a more convenient location.

    13
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    Mute AlMar
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    May 30th 2012, 12:48 PM

    Actually it seems to me that the day varies with the issue. Younger people/students are less likely to vote on a Thursday, so it seems to me that politicians choose the day depending on how they think it will impact on their chance of success.
    There is merit in picking a particular day and just sticking with it.

    9
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    Mute Eoin Faz
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    May 30th 2012, 9:37 AM

    So what % of the Greek population would have emigrate into the euro zone and send back part of their weekly wages?

    Also tourism accounts for 35% of the Greek economy, how much would this increase by if they cut their prices in half?

    57
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    Mute Fagan's
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    May 30th 2012, 1:37 PM

    Who knows, the only choice in front of Greece, is out now, hard 6 months and start to grow again next year or have another decade of decline, which will leave them alot worse than the figures given above.

    By the ECB’s own targets, they will be at 120% debt to GDP in 2020. So they’ll need a bailout. They are dying economically in the Eurozone, and unless the payments to bail them out, grow in size and are permanent.

    8
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    Mute BailOutYourMates
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    May 30th 2012, 9:31 AM

    The lay citizen taking the blame for others mistakes again being made scapegoats.

    54
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    Mute Rob Power
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    May 30th 2012, 10:01 AM

    Can you explain that point? Do you mean Greece are the lay citizens of Europe?

    72
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    Mute BailOutYourMates
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    May 30th 2012, 10:08 AM

    Did I say they were the lay citizens of Europe?! No.

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    Mute Rob Power
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    May 30th 2012, 10:12 AM

    Wow, touchy. I just asked you to clarify as I didn’t understand the point you were making in relation to above article.

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    Mute BailOutYourMates
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    May 30th 2012, 10:50 AM

    No not touchy just able to interpret basic English.

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    Mute Ross McCarthy
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    May 30th 2012, 11:15 AM

    Then interpret the stability treaty correctly and you will see that your pic “Bail out people not bank VOTE NO” is totally irrelevant to the issue being voted on :-)

    47
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    Mute BailOutYourMates
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    May 30th 2012, 11:36 AM

    You obviously don’t understand the treaty yourself. With that comment.

    6
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    Mute Jack Gleeson
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    May 30th 2012, 9:45 AM

    Hard to see how the EU would survive Greece exiting the euro. The currency would lose too much credibility. And if the euro goes, it would a failure from which Europe would probably not recover.

    40
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    Mute Ian Walsh
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    May 30th 2012, 7:57 PM

    wow, Europe would probably never recover? Europe has survived two world wars…..

    3
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    Mute Derek Larney
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    May 30th 2012, 10:05 AM

    I’d much prefer the Iceland method than the Japanese one.

    39
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    Mute Stephen Downey
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    May 30th 2012, 9:39 AM

    The bank forgot to mention that an exit would also trigger a banking collapse across Europe.

    Greece is going nowhere. Bank statements, either your personal one on a monthly basis, or grand public statements like this should be taken with a huge dose of scepticism.

    35
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    Mute Sean O'Keeffe
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    May 30th 2012, 9:52 AM

    It is hardly surprising that a Greek bank would paint an apocolyptic picture of what would happen if Greece leaves the Euro. Self-preservation is a natural instinct.
    There are two ways forward. Neither route is painless.
    Greece (and Ireland) can choose the Icelandic route of a sharp painful correction with a return to growth in the short term.
    Or Greece (and Ireland) can choose the Japanese route where over decades an anemic economy exists to support zombie banks. Ultimately, these banks will fail anyway.
    The fiscal compact is designed to support the later route. Governments will be required to place the burden of any corrections on their own citizens, while protecting banks at all costs.

    New York Times:

    LONDON — Is Europe the new Japan?

    Parallels abound between Europe’s current debt crisis and Japan’s so-called Lost Decade, when the Asian country’s economy imploded in the 1990s.

    Both regions experienced real estate booms ahead of their financial crises, consumers took on large levels of debt and domestic banks built up unsustainable loan-to-deposit ratios as they sought to feed local demand for borrowing.

    Recently, analysts at Barclays examined whether Europe’s debt crisis would affect local banks the same way that Japan’s economic downturn hurt that country’s financial institutions.

    Their conclusions are not happy reading for European banks, which are trying to pare back lending, increase capital reserves and reduce risky trading activity in investment banking units.

    Many of the Continent’s largest financial institutions have recently reported weak first-quarter earnings. Last week, Deutsche Bank of Germany announced a 34 percent drop in net profit, to $1.85 billion, while the Swiss banking giant UBS said on Wednesday that income for the first three months of the year fell 54 percent, to $911 million.

    28
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    Mute rodrigo detriano
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    May 30th 2012, 11:05 AM

    The only solution is a good old fashioned war! Best job creation scheme ever!!!

    19
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    Mute Peadar Mac Gothraidh
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    May 30th 2012, 9:55 AM

    The people if Iceland would disagree I’m sure. The worst mob to take advice from are bankers and politicians, remember that tomorrow at the polls.

    27
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    Mute Willie Penwright
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    May 30th 2012, 9:38 AM

    Vote No 1 the Bankers Party – just like Ireland so.

    22
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    Mute HARRY MARKOPOLOS
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    May 30th 2012, 2:54 PM

    They may get their freedom by exiting.

    Sometimes freedom has a price, but that price is worth paying.

    9
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    Mute Eugene Conroy
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    May 30th 2012, 1:31 PM

    who said the illumaniti is fiction
    the bankers will get themselfs out of this euro mess at a cost to the tax payer.

    3
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    Mute Neil
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    May 30th 2012, 1:44 PM

    Dan Brown sucks.

    3
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    Mute martin dorgan
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    May 30th 2012, 2:15 PM

    Reality strikes home here. Very serious situation on exiting Eurozone . Tax take in Greece low uncollected taxes 60 Billion could go a long way in alleviating poverty traps in welfare. They need our support in maintaining eu aid.

    2
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