Archive for Supreme State Security Prosecution

Twelve terrorism suspects arrested in Cairo's Nasr City last week have denied the charges filed against them, while a lawyer representing two of them said they were subjected to torture during interrogation, judicial sources told Al-Masry Al-Youm.

The group is facing charges of planning terrorist attacks in Cairo and other provinces and attempting to overthrow the ruling regime. Their detention has been renewed for 45 days.

The suspects told interrogators from the Supreme State Security Prosecution that the money confiscated from their residences upon their arrest was not meant for terrorist acts, and argued that authorities have no evidence that the funds were from illicit sources. They also denied knowledge of the weapons seized during security raids.

The suspects include Tarek Abul Azm and Ramy Mohamed, both dismissed army officers, as well as Tarek Heleil, Bassam Ali, Haitham Ali, Mohamed Saeed, Gharby Abdel Fattah, Ahmed Youssef, Anbil Abdel Moneim, and Saeed Mohamed.

A lawyer representing Abul Azm and Ali said his clients had been beaten during interrogations, arguing that the whole case had been fabricated in a bid by security authorities to play President Mohamed Morsy off against Islamists.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

 

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Egyptian security authorities arrested jihadi leader Adel Awad Shehto on allegations of forming the “terrorist cell” in Nasr City which was discovered by Egyptian security forces on 24 October, London-based Al-Hayat newspaper reported.

The paper quoted on Wednesday Magdy Salem, a lawyer for Jama'a al-Islamiya who is also defending the jihadi leader as saying that Shehto was arrested along with former army officer Tarek Abul Azm.

On 24 October, Egyptian security forces in Cairo raided an eastern district of Nasr City, killing a Libyan militant whom Egypt said was involved in September’s attack on the US Consulate in Benghazi. Police also said that four Egyptian militants were arrested in the raid.

Authorities have said they were planning to carry out attacks during Eid al-Adha, but did not give any details. Presidential spokesperson Yasser Ali said Wednesday that officials would release more information when the investigation is complete.

Abul Azm was imprisoned in the late 1990s for his involvement in a terrorist cell, but both Abul Azm and Shehto were released by the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces in April 2011, two months after Hosni Mubarak’s fall. Also released was Mohamed Gamal al-Kashef, known as Abu Ahmed, who had joined Al-Qaeda and is also accused in the Nasr City case. No information was provided whether the Abu Ahmed was also arrested or not.

Quoting Salem, Al-Hayat said that Shehto was scheduled to be questioned by the Supreme State Security Prosecution on Tuesday but the investigations were postponed to Wednesday for reasons that were not disclosed.

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One terrorism suspect was killed and five others arrested by police forces on Thursday after a gun battle in the deceased man’s apartment in Nasr City, east of Cairo, said security sources. The confrontation led to a bomb being detonated, setting fire to the entire building.

According to investigations, the deceased was Karim al-Azizi, a Libyan citizen suspected of involvement in last month’s assassination of the US ambassador to Libya.

The flat where Aziz was killed was used to store weapons used by members of a terrorist cell, allege Egyptian investigators. Security sources said they found 17 bombs, four RPGs, three automatic weapons and huge quantities of ammunition inside.

The Supreme State Security Prosecution decided to detain the five suspects for 15 days pending investigations into charges of terrorism and planning to commit terrorist acts in the country.

Local residents told Al-Masry Al-Youm that during the raid, Azizi threw a bomb at the police forces, but it bounced back into the apartment causing the building to burn down.

Residents of the building said that Azizi had started living in the apartment seven months ago. He lived alone, would typically return home late and would be visited by a few people.

One local resident, Mohamed Abdel Hamid, 28, said he was awoken by the sound of the bomb and found a huge number of policemen in the street, who prevented the building residents to leave out of fear that the suspects would escape.

As flames rose following the detonation of the bomb, people tried to get out of the building, some even throwing themselves out of windows onto blankets and mattresses that were placed on the ground for them to jump on, Abdel Hamid added.

Twenty four-year-old Nora Fawzi, who lives on the first floor of the building, said, “After the neighbors saved my family, the stairs collapsed after the explosion and flames rose from inside the apartment of the suspect. That prompted me to return to my apartment again and throw myself from the first floor after I got frightened and felt like I was inevitably going to die. People put blankets on the floor and I jumped from the first floor.”

Amir Mahmoud, who lives in the building across the street, said that after the fire neighborhood officials came to inspect the damage caused to the building.

He added that following the inspection they would grant each resident a LE1,000 in compensation, and the neighborhood would repair the damage caused to the building.

In Mahmoud’s opinion, “The police managed the incident poorly, especially since the security services already had information about the defendant and the cell to which he belongs.”

Samar Nasser, another resident, said the civil defense forces came to put out the fire before it moved to the adjacent buildings, shutting down the gas line and cutting the electricity to help prevent its spread.

Witnesses say neighborhood youth formed rescue teams, bringing long iron ladders and placing them outside the building to help the trapped residents escape their apartments.

Three others suspected of belonging to a terrorist cell have also been arrested in Gharbiya and Alexandria. Sources say the suspects were in possession of firearms, and are currently being interrogated.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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Former MP Mohamed Abou Hamed, one of the organizers of the 24 August protests, said that protesters will continue their sit-in in front of the presidential palace “until the revolution achieves its goals.”

In a statement addressed to protesters in front of the palace on Saturday, Abou Hamed said that he had met with the Cairo security chief and explained to him the protest’s peaceful nature, after rumors started circulating that security would forcibly break up the demonstration.

His comments came as a citizen filed a report with the attorney general accusing Abou Hamed of incitement and advocating the overthrow of the government. The report was referred to the Supreme State Security Prosecution for investigation.

The citizen had reported to the attorney general that he was watching a religious satellite channel when it received a telephone call from political and human rights activist Mohamed Othman, who said he had confirmed that Abou Hamed had received funding from both internal and external sources to cause sectarian strife and overthrow the regime.

According to Othman, the foreign funds come from Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea, who Abou Hamed met while visiting Lebanon. He further alleged that the internal funding comes from an Egyptian businessman aiming to agitate public opinion against President Mohamed Morsy.

Othman added that Abou Hamed told an international television network that a US official told him to gather at least 100,000 protestors for a sit-in in front of the presidential palace and other vital places — along with media personality Tawfiq Okasha — for three days.

On Saturday morning, dozens of anti-Brotherhood protesters marched on Roxy Square, blocking traffic on Salah Salem Road and chanting slogans against the Brotherhood.

Protesters at the presidential palace demanded that the Brotherhood stop interfering in the country’s affairs and called for an investigation into the group’s sources of funding.

The Friday rally had been organized by Abou Hamed, Okasha and former MP Mostafa Bakry.

Several political groups boycotted the protest, saying its goals were not clear. Only dozens showed up for the Friday demonstrations.

The Brotherhood and its Freedom and Justice Party condemned the protest, saying President Morsy was elected in a clean contest characterized by integrity.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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Cairo International Airport authorities on Wednesday arrested a political activist accused of inciting violence before her departure for the United States.

The state-run MENA news service quoted sources at the airport as saying that Julia Milad, 35, was put on a travel ban by the attorney general.

Milad was accused, along with Mamdouh Hamza, a leading activist and prominent civil engineer, by the Supreme State Security Prosecution of inciting strikes and civil disobedience.

She denied the charges saying that they are all fabricated, MENA reported on Wednesday.

Last February, Hamza, along with number of revolutionaries, were accused of incitement and working to bring down the state. He was placed under a travel ban, but last month Egypt’s State Security prosecutors lifted the ban.

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