An Egyptian military court sentenced 148 supporters of ousted country's President Mohamed Morsi to life imprisonment in absentia over the 2013 clashes in the city of Minya, local media reported.
The defendants were charged with sabotage, violence, rioting and calling for protests, the Aswat Masriya media outlet reported Sunday.
According to the media outlet, the court has also acquitted 10 other defendants. In August, 2013, Morsi's supporters organized demonstrations in the city of Minya, which resulted in violent clashes with the police.
The charges included affiliation to the banned Brotherhood organization, involvement in storming government buildings, and taking part in protests against police forces and the army.
The junta's crackdown on the opposition began after Morsi was removed from power in 2013 in a coup led by the then-army chief and now-President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi. Since then, Egyptian courts have held mass trials for thousands of Morsi supporters and members of the Brotherhood organization, which backed Morsi.
Rights groups in Egypt and across the world have recorded cases of irregularities in the trials of political prisoners in the country.
Sisi's government has outlawed the Brotherhood organization, which is Egypt's oldest opposition movement. The group operated under strict measures during the rule of longtime dictator Hosni
Mubarak, who was himself removed from power in a public uprising in 2011.
Morsi had been sentenced to death on charges of corruption, escaping from prison and inciting violence before the Court of Cassation overturned that ruling in November last year and ordered a retrial.
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