by The Associated Press and Israel Hayom Staff
Cairo court decision bans activities by Hamas in Egypt, branding it a terrorist organization • Court orders that Hamas offices in the country be shut down and all dealings with the group be suspended.
A Hamas rally in Gaza [Archive]
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Photo credit: AP |
An Egyptian court ruled on Tuesday to ban Hamas activities in the country, branding the group a terrorist organization.
The Cairo court ordered the closure of Hamas offices in Egypt and the suspension of all dealings with the group.
Egypt's relations with Hamas have sharply
deteriorated since the Egyptian military overthrew the Islamist
president Mohammed Morsi last July. Egypt's interim leaders maintain
that Hamas is playing a key role in the insurgency by militants in the
northern region of the Sinai Peninsula, which borders the Hamas-ruled
Gaza Strip and Israel.
Egyptian Foreign Minister Nabil Fahmy,
addressing a previously scheduled news conference, said he was not aware
of the ruling, but added: "Whoever threatens Egypt's security should
understand that there will be consequences."
Egyptian authorities have destroyed many of the smuggling tunnels running under the Egypt-Gaza border.
Hamas is the Palestinian chapter of Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood and the two forged close ties during Morsi's year in office.
In Gaza, senior Hamas official Izzat Rishq condemned Tuesday's ruling, saying the movement viewed it as a "political decision."
Morsi and scores of Brotherhood leaders are in
detention, facing a multitude of trials on a wide range of charges
including several that carry the death penalty.
Two of those cases involve Hamas members,
accused of assisting Morsi and others in escaping from prison in 2011.
Morsi and others are also charged in a separate trial of leaking state
secrets to Hamas.
Tuesday's ruling by the Court of Urgent
Matters was the result of a case brought before the court by an Egyptian
lawyer seeking a verdict branding Hamas a terrorist organization and
suspending any dealings with it.
The ruling said Hamas was founded in 1988 as
an Islamic resistance movement but later abandoned that course and
became a terrorist organization.
Samir Sabry, the lawyer who filed the case, said the
ruling meant that any Hamas member currently in Egypt has now lost any
legal cover for his stay and should be arrested.
The Associated Press and Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=15911
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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