A man stands outside a faculty building at Cairo's Al-Azhar University after student supporters of the Muslim Brotherhood stormed it on December 28, 2013.
Cairo:
An Egyptian court on Thursday sentenced 17 people to 14 years in jail each on charges including assault and occupying public buildings during protests at Cairo's Al-Azhar University last year.
The defendants, believed to be supporters of deposed Egyptian president Mohamed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood, had demonstrated to demand investigation and punishment of those responsible for mass food poisoning at the Al-Azhar campus.
Dozens of students were hospitalised at the time of the poisonings last April at Al-Azhar, a seat of Islamic learning that draws students from across the Sunni Muslim world.
Security forces have cracked down hard on the Brotherhood since Morsi's ouster last July, killing hundreds of supporters in the streets and arresting thousands of others. The movement's top leaders are on trial.
Human rights groups accuse the army-backed government of human rights abuses and orchestrating political trials against members of the movement, which won nearly every election after an uprising toppled autocrat Hosni Mubarak in 2011.
The government denies the allegations and has declared the Brotherhood a terrorist group that threatens the country's security. The movement says it is committed to peaceful activism.
The defendants, believed to be supporters of deposed Egyptian president Mohamed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood, had demonstrated to demand investigation and punishment of those responsible for mass food poisoning at the Al-Azhar campus.
Dozens of students were hospitalised at the time of the poisonings last April at Al-Azhar, a seat of Islamic learning that draws students from across the Sunni Muslim world.
Security forces have cracked down hard on the Brotherhood since Morsi's ouster last July, killing hundreds of supporters in the streets and arresting thousands of others. The movement's top leaders are on trial.
Human rights groups accuse the army-backed government of human rights abuses and orchestrating political trials against members of the movement, which won nearly every election after an uprising toppled autocrat Hosni Mubarak in 2011.
The government denies the allegations and has declared the Brotherhood a terrorist group that threatens the country's security. The movement says it is committed to peaceful activism.
© Thomson Reuters 2014
Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world