More than 450 imprisoned Muslim Brotherhood members launched a hunger strike today over their "inhuman treatment" after being jailed following the military's overthrow of Egyptian president Mohamed Morsi, the group said.
A Twitter account operated by the Brotherhood, which has largely been driven underground by a massive crackdown, said prisoners have been "banned from family visits, legal counselling, medical care and (live in) overcrowded and unhygienic cells."
Egyptian security forces have arrested thousands of Islamists, including virtually the entire top leadership of Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood, since he was deposed on July 3.
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But his turbulent year-long rule was deeply polarising, and the military forced him from power after massive protests in which demonstrators accused him of betraying the 2011 "revolution."
The Brotherhood said several senior figures were taking part in the strike, including the wealthy financier and onetime presidential hopeful Khairat al-Shater, senior official Essam al-Erian, former legislator Mohamed Beltagi and Essam al-Haddad, an advisor to Morsi during his presidency.
It did not say whether Morsi himself or the Brotherhood's Supreme Guide Mohammed Badie were also taking part in the hunger strike.
Earlier this month Human Rights Watch said Egypt's military-installed authorities had detained five Morsi aides for nearly five months without disclosing their whereabouts, saying it amounted to an "enforced disappearance.