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Turkey to probe deportation of Muslim Brotherhood member facing execution in Cairo

Mohamed Abdelhafiz Ahmed Hussein, who the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood movement identifies as a member.

Turkey will investigate the deportation of an Egyptian facing execution in Cairo over a car bomb and has suspended eight policemen involved, the İstanbul Governor’s Office said on Wednesday, Reuters reported.

Mohamed Abdelhafiz Ahmed Hussein, who the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood movement identifies as a member, was among 28 people sentenced in absentia to death in July 2017 for killing Egypt’s public prosecutor in the attack, according to state media.

He was sent back to Egypt last month from İstanbul Ataturk Airport upon arrival from Somalia for not having a visa.

According to the MEE news outlet, a Turkish official who spoke on condition of anonymity said airport authorities offered to send Abdelhafiz to Mogadishu instead of Cairo but that he refused.

The case adds to strained Turkey-Egypt relations since the army ousted President Mohamed Mursi, of the Brotherhood, following mass protests against his rule in 2013.

The İstanbul Governor’s Office said on Tuesday that when Hussein arrived, there was no information he was facing trial anywhere, and he did not request protection, so officials deemed him an “unacceptable passenger” due to the lack of a Turkish visa.

In a separate statement on Wednesday, the governor’s office said a commission had been set up to investigate the deportation and that eight police officers were suspended from duty over it.

An adviser to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said it was wrong to repatriate anyone facing charges in Egypt and that the matter needed checking.

“During the leadership of [Egyptian President Abdel Fattah] el-Sisi, Turkey has not and does not hand over anyone facing the death penalty or any other charges,” Yasin Aktay wrote in the pro-government Yeni Şafak newspaper on Wednesday.

The Muslim Brotherhood has close ties with Turkey’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), and many of its members have fled to Turkey since the group’s activities were banned in Egypt.

Cairo says the Brotherhood, the world’s oldest Islamist movement, is a terrorist organization. Most of its senior members have been arrested, driven into exile or underground.

The Brotherhood says it is a peaceful organization.

Defendants sentenced in absentia in Egypt are automatically retried once they are captured or turn themselves in.

Sources in Egypt’s National Security Service said Hussein was questioned and moved to jail ahead of his retrial after arriving in Egypt.

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