FJP deputy leader Essam El-Erian detained for 30 days

Aaron T. Rose
2 Min Read
Vice chairman of the Freedom and Justice Party Essam El-Erian (AFP File Photo)
Vice chairman of the Freedom and Justice Party Essam El-Erian (AFP File Photo)
Vice chairman of the Freedom and Justice Party Essam El-Erian
(AFP File Photo)

Essam El-Erian, deputy leader of the Muslim Brotherhood’s Freedom and Justice Party, was ordered detained for 30 days, state-run MENA reported.

El-Erian was arrested in the early hours of Wednesday morning, according to the Ministry of Interior. He was ordered into preventative detention in relation to investigations into accusations of inciting other members of the Muslim Brotherhood to commit violence and murder. Investigations with him began on Wednesday morning inside Tora Prison, where he is being kept.

Prosecution had previously issued an arrest warrant against El-Erian, MENA reported.

The assests of El-Erian and around a dozen other prominent Islamist figures were ordered frozen by Prosecutor General Hesham Barakat, in a decision that was upheld by court last month.

El-Erian’s arrest in a New Cairo residence is the latest in a continuing crackdown by the interim government against the Muslim Brotherhood group.

Nearly all high-ranking Brotherhood members have been arrested since the ouster of Mohamed Morsi from the presidency on 3 July. According to a source at the Ministry of Interior, El-Erian was taken into custody from a friend’s home in the upscale New Cairo neighbourhood Al-Tagamoa Al-Khames. The source said that El-Erian’s arrest stems from charges that he ordered the killing of protestors.

Morsi is set to be tried on 4 November for charges related to the death of protestors in front of the Presidential Palace last December.

The trial for Supreme Guide of the Muslim Brotherhood Mohamed Badie and his deputies Khairat El-Shater and Rashad Bayoumi was delayed on Tuesday when presiding Judge Mohamed Amin Al-Qarmouty recused himself from the case.

Badie, El-Shater and Bayoumi are being tried for the killing of nine protestors outside the Muslim Brotherhood headquarters during the demonstrations on 30 June that eventually forced Morsi from office.

Share This Article
Aaron T. Rose is an American journalist in Cairo. Follow him on Twitter: @Aaron_T_Rose
1 Comment