An Egyptian court today sentenced 126 supporters of ousted Islamist president Mohamed Morsi to 10 years in prison each in a mass trial over protest violence, judicial sources said.
Another court, in Cairo, sentenced a further 37 alleged Morsi supporters to 15 years in prison for trying to set off bombs during a protest at a metro station last year.
The 126 found guilty in the northern province of Kafr El-Sheikh were accused of rioting and attacking security forces on August 16, two days after police killed hundreds of Morsi supporters in the capital.
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They were also charged with belonging to a banned group, a reference to Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood.
The army-installed government has rounded up thousands of Morsi supporters and held mass trials since his ouster in July last year.
The court in Kafr El-Sheikh also sentenced six other people to a year in prison each, although the charges against them were not immediately available.
Judicial sources said that all those convicted in Kafr El-Sheikh today were also fined 1,000 Egyptian pounds (about USD 143, 111 euros) each.
A relentless crackdown on Morsi's supporters has killed more than 1,400 people, and hundreds have been sentenced to death after speedy trials.