According to the investigations conducted by the Supreme State Security Prosecution in Egypt, Khairat Al-Shater’s daughter, along with a number of sisters, took over the task of supporting the terrorist organization, by facilitating the transfer of funds and instructions from Brotherhood leaders abroad to the armed arms and elements of the organization at home.
Well-informed Egyptian sources said in statements to Sky News Arabia that “Aisha Al-Shater assumed responsibility for leading the Sisters’ Department for a period of time during the June revolution, and planned operations related to spreading rumors targeting the stability of the country, and related to freedoms and allegations of enforced disappearance.”
Sources familiar with the progress of the lawsuit stated that Aisha Muhammad Khairat Saad Al-Shater, aged 37, had been involved in Brotherhood campaigns over the past years, particularly since President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi assumed the presidency of Egypt, claiming that there were cases of “enforced disappearance” of activists affiliated with The current of political Islam, although the Egyptian authorities denied this matter more than once with official statements.
The sources say that the Brotherhood’s campaigns against the state were organized in cooperation between members of the organization inside Egypt and abroad, including members of what is known as the “Egyptian Brotherhood Association outside the country.” 2021.
The sources explain that the terrorist organization established what is known as the “Egyptian Coordination for Rights and Freedoms”, with the aim of distorting the state’s security and judicial institutions, and claiming that the authorities have unlawfully detained people, subjected them to torture and murder without substantiating these allegations.
According to the text of the accusations contained in the case papers, the defendants are accused of financial and moral support for the terrorist group and the terrorists affiliated with it, as well as possession of publications and recordings to promote the Brotherhood and its purposes, with the use of social networking sites Facebook, Twitter and YouTube, to incite the use of violence against state institutions.
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The Egyptian security expert, Major General Mahmoud Mansour, says that the terrorist group, which is banned by law in Egypt, was known to have formed a number of committees and sub-special cells, to achieve its goals in an indirect way.
The security expert added in an interview with Sky News Arabia that the investigations of the security services and the judiciary proved that a number of sons of Brotherhood leaders and cadres of the middle ranks in the terrorist group were exploited in these activities inside and outside Egypt.
Mansour explained that the enforced disappearance campaigns that appear from time to time are nothing but false Brotherhood allegations with the aim of inflaming local and international public opinion against the Egyptian state, but the current case reveals the truth that the Brotherhood is behind the organized psychological campaigns targeting Egypt.
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According to sources familiar with the investigations with 31 Brotherhood members, including the daughter of Khairat al-Shater, the purpose of the campaigns claiming the existence of enforced disappearance in Egypt was “incitement against state institutions,” and in implementation of the directives of the Brotherhood organization led by Mahmoud Hussein.
On Sunday, the Emergency State Security Criminal Court in Egypt, headed by Counselor Mohamed El-Sherbiny, decided to postpone the trial of a number of Brotherhood leaders, including the daughter of Khairat al-Shater, the deputy guide of the terrorist Brotherhood, to the next February 14 session.
The case includes 31 Brotherhood members, who are facing charges of joining a banned group and receiving funding from abroad.
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