The trial of former Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi, deposed by the army and sentenced to 20 years in jail, was "badly flawed" and appears to have been politically motivated, a leading human rights group has said.
Mursi and 12 other Muslim Brotherhood members were last week convicted of violence, kidnapping and torture over the deaths of protesters in 2012. They were acquitted of murder, which carries the death sentence.
The rise to power of the Brotherhood, a decades-old Islamist movement, after the Arab Spring uprisings polarised Egypt's population and led to months of unrest.
The army ousted Mursi in mid-2013 after mass protests against his rule. Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, army chief at the time, went on to win presidential elections last year.
Human Rights Watch said Mursi's detention without charge for more than three weeks after his removal from office violated Egyptian law, and it criticised the prosecution's heavy reliance on the testimony of military and police officers.
"Whatever political responsibility (Mursi) may have, the prosecution didn't establish his criminal guilt in this case", the New York-based rights group said in a statement entitled Egypt: (Mursi) Trial Badly Flawed which it released on Sunday.
It also cited a spokesman for the defence team saying the lawyers were only allowed to visit Mursi once in November 2013.
Another lawyer was cited as saying the defence did not call witnesses out of fear for their safety.
A government statement last week rejected criticism of the Mursi's sentencing as "unacceptable interference in (Egypt's) internal affairs, let alone disrespect of the rulings of the Egyptian judiciary".
Mursi and his co-defendants deny the charges against them and are expected to appeal. Their case is part of a wider crackdown on the Brotherhood launched after the army overthrew the Islamist president.
Harsh rulings against thousands of Mursi supporters, including death sentences handed down in mass trials, have been widely condemned abroad, including by rights groups, the United States and the European Union.
Human Rights Watch also said the authorities had not investigated the killings of Mursi supporters at the 2012 demonstrations, creating "an appearance that the case was politically motivated against the Brotherhood".
Mursi faces charges in four other cases including leaking secrets to Qatar, conspiring with the Palestinian militant group Hamas to destabilise Egypt, and organising a jailbreak during the 2011 uprising against Hosni Mubarak.
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