An Egyptian court has upheld death sentences for seven people over the beheadings in Libya of 21 Christians, all but one from Egypt, and for belonging to Daesh, a judicial official said Sunday.
In February 2015, Libya posted a video on the Internet of the beheadings on a Libyan beach, sparking international condemnation and Egyptian airstrikes against militant targets in the neighboring country. The court ruling came a day after an attack on a mosque in Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula.
The court also sentenced 10 people to life in prison — 25 years in Egypt — and three others to 15 years in prison, the official said. The ruling can still be appealed.
The court first condemned the seven to death in September. Three were condemned in absentia, and an unspecified number of those sentenced were accused of having taken part in the beheadings.
Prosecutors accused the seven suspects of belonging to a Daesh cell in Marsa Matruh, northwest Egypt, and of planning attacks after having received military training at militant camps in Libya and Syria.
In May, Egypt again struck what it said were militant targets in Libya after Daesh claimed a massacre of Coptic Christians on their way to a monastery south of Cairo.
President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi said military reverses for Daesh in war-torn Syria were driving its fighters to try to relocate to Libya and the Sinai Peninsula of eastern Egypt.
Egypt has been battling an insurgency by a Daesh affiliate based in North Sinai since the military’s ouster in 2013 of President Mohammed Mursi.
Hundreds of members of Egypt’s security forces have been killed, while more than 100 Copts have died in church bombings since December.
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