Brotherhood spokesman Gehad al-Haddad held in Egypt
Gehad al-Haddad is the son of Mohammed Morsi's former foreign affairs adviser, Essam al-Haddad
Egyptian police have arrested the Muslim Brotherhood's main English-language spokesman, state media report.
Gehad al-Haddad was reportedly found with at least one other Brotherhood official in a flat in Cairo.
Mr Haddad had served as chief of staff of the Brotherhood's
deputy general guide, Khairat al-Shater, and often spoke to foreign
media organisations.
There has been a crackdown on Islamist groups since the military ousted President Mohammed Morsi in July.
Earlier, the Cairo Criminal Court upheld an order to freeze
the assets of senior figures in the Brotherhood and the former militant
group Gamaa Islamiya, state media said.
Prosecutors imposed the restrictions on the Brotherhood's
general guide, Mohammed Badie, Mr Shater and about a dozen others in
July. Most have been detained over allegations of inciting violence and
murder.
Hundreds of people demanding Mr Morsi's reinstatement, most
of them Brotherhood members, were also killed in clashes when security
forces stormed two protest camps in Cairo last month.
'Incitement'
The state-run newspaper, al-Ahram, said Mr Haddad had been
arrested on Tuesday along with the former governor of Qalyubia province,
Hossam Abu al-Bakr, in a flat in the eastern Cairo suburb of Nasr City.
Security sources told the Reuters news agency that a third Brotherhood official had also been detained.
State television did not say what charges Mr Haddad faced,
but al-Ahram reported that he was suspected of inciting violence and
murder. He had been transferred to Tora prison on the outskirts of the
capital, it added.
The son of Mr Morsi's former foreign affairs adviser Essam
al-Haddad, Mr Haddad is a senior adviser and media spokesman for the
Brotherhood. He studied at De Montfort University in the UK and is
fluent in English.
He served as media strategist for Mr Morsi's presidential
campaign in 2011, and was interviewed frequently by foreign TV stations
and newspapers before and after the president was deposed following mass
protests. He was also active on social media, tweeting as @gelhaddad.
In a separate development on Tuesday, two soldiers were
killed and two others wounded by gunmen in al-Salihiya al-Jadida, in
Sharqiya province north-east of Cairo.
It is not known whether the incident is linked to the
military's offensive against jihadist militants in the Sinai peninsula,
which has triggered a series of attacks on security targets in the past
two weeks.
No comments:
Post a Comment