Defence requests referring "cabinet clashes" trial to different bench

Wednesday 17-09-2014 04:57 PM
Defence requests referring

Political activist Ahmed Douma of the 6 April movement looks on behind bars in Cairo, December 22, 2013. REUTERS/Stringer

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CAIRO, Sept 17 (Aswat Masriya) -  The Cairo Criminal Court postponed on Wednesday the trial of political activist and blogger Ahmed Douma and 268 others over taking part in the "cabinet clashes" which occurred in December 2011.

The session was postponed to September 23 after the defence team requested referring the case to a different bench. Osama al-Mahdy, Douma's lawyer, told Aswat Masriya the request was made due to the bench's "obstinacy" in meeting the defence team's requests.

Mahdy withdrew from the trial's previous session on September 3 after the court referred him alongside two other lawyers to investigation. The court had accused the lawyers of "rioting" and refusing to follow its orders, according to an eyewitness account.

Douma arrived in an ambulance to the court due to his deteriorating health condition, a security source told Aswat Masriya.

Douma, detained since December, started a hunger strike on August 28 to protest his imprisonment. Douma's lawyer said his client lost a lot of weight in a short amount of time. 

The defendants are charged with illegal assembly, possession of bladed weapons and Molotov cocktails, assaulting army and police personnel and attacking governmental institutions in December 2011 during the "cabinet clashes".  

Clashes broke out between protesters and security forces outside the cabinet headquarters in December 2011, leaving at least three people dead and 255 wounded.

The National Council for Human Rights (NCHR) recommended medical supervision at an external hospital for Douma and other hunger-striking prisoners earlier this month. 

Douma's wife filed a report to the prosecutor-general against the interior minister and his deputy for prison affairs for their tenacity in the matter of transferring Douma to the hospital after his health condition worsened. 

Hunger strikes have lately become a common tool to protest detention, used by those arrested for political reasons.

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