CAIRO (Reuters) - Deposed Egyptian president Mohamed Mursi
was on Sunday ordered to stand trial for insulting the judiciary, legal
sources said, alongside 24 others including liberal activists who
opposed his Islamist rule but have also been critical of the new
army-backed order.
It is the fourth case brought against Mursi since he was ousted by
the army last year, after a year in power, following mass protests
against his rule.
But it also points to the growing pressure faced by the secularminded activists who helped to topple Hosni Mubarak in 2011, and
have criticized both Mursi's Muslim Brotherhood when it was in
power and the new military-backed authorities.
The non-Islamists charged in the case include former members of parliament Amr Hamzawy and Mostafa El Naggar,
as well as Alaa Abdel Fattah, an activist blogger detained since November and already facing trial on charges of
protesting without permission.
The charge of insulting the judiciary carries a jail term of up to three years.
Mursi has already been charged with inciting violence and conspiring with foreign militants against Egypt.
Egypt's army-backed interim government has waged a determined campaign of suppression against the Brotherhood,
which it has labeled a terrorist organization. The security forces killed hundreds of its supporters in the weeks after
Mursi was overthrown, and arrested thousands more.
The government accuses the Brotherhood of turning to violence. The Brotherhood, once Egypt's best-organized
political and religious movement, which won five consecutive elections, denies any links to violence and accuses the
army of staging a coup.
Mursi is next due in court on January 28, when he goes on trial on charges related to a mass jailbreak in 2011.
The interim government is pushing ahead with a political transition plan that should lead to presidential and
parliamentary elections this year, with army chief General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi seen as a likely candidate.
Egyptians passed a new constitution in a referendum last week with a 98.1 percent "yes" vote, according to official
results. The vote was boycotted by the Brotherhood.
(The story corrects first paragraph to make clear not all the other accused are liberals)
(Writing by Michael Georgy and Sameh Bardisi; Editing by Tom Perry and Kevin Liffey)