CAIRO: An investigating judge has ordered the detention of Egypt’s ousted president over alleged contacts with Hamas to help in his escape from prison in 2011, the official state news agency reported Friday in the first official word on his status since a military coup on July 3. The MENA news agency said Mohammed Morsi has been detained for 15 days for investigation into the charges. His detention can be extended as the inquiry continues.
The news agency indicated that Morsi has already been interrogated.
The announcement comes after military strongman General Abdel-Fatah el-Sissi called for mass demonstrations Friday to oppose what he called ”terrorism”, a clear reference to Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood.
The Brotherhood’s spiritual leader responded by calling el-Sissi a ”traitor”. The Brotherhood also called for mass protests on Friday, escalating fears of clashes between the two opposing groups of demonstrators or with the military, which has pledged to keep order and prevent violence.
The case concerns the mass jailbreak of dozens of Muslim Brotherhood leaders during the popular uprising in 2011 that toppled Morsi’s predecessor, President Hosni Mubarak.
There have been many reports in Egyptian media that the Brotherhood collaborated with Hamas and Hezbollah militants in Lebanon to arrange the breakout.
Muslim Brotherhood officials have said they were aided by local residents in breaking out of prison, not foreigners.
Egypt’s military has been holding Morsi in an undisclosed location since deposing him on July 3.
The MENA report said Morsi is being investigated over allegations of collaborating with Hamas ”to carry out anti-state acts, attacking police stations, army officers and storming prisons, setting fire to one prison and enabling inmates to flee, including himself, as well as premeditated killing of officers , soldiers and prisoners”.