close
Thursday April 25, 2024

Egyptian minister sacked over blasphemy

By our correspondents
March 14, 2016

CAIRO: Egypt’s prime minister sacked Justice Minister Ahmed al-Zend on Sunday after he was criticised for blasphemous remarks.

Zend’s comments came in a televised interview on Friday.

He immediately said, “God forgive me”, and on Saturday issued an apology in another interview.  It was not immediately clear who would replace Zend, a hardliner and outspoken critic of the Muslim Brotherhood.

“Prime Minister Sherif Ismail issued a decree today to relieve Ahmed al-Zend of his position,” a government statement said, giving no more details.

Zend, a former appeals court judge, had been publicly outspoken in his criticism of the Islamist movement removed from power by the army in mid-2013 and banned as a terrorist group.

He has in the past denounced the 2011 revolt that ended Hosni Mubarak’s 30-year rule and ushered in the election that brought the Muslim Brotherhood to power.

He has also been a strong defender of the judiciary and its powerful position.

Egyptian judges issued a statement opposing Zend’s removal over what the head of the Judges Club said was a slip of the tongue that could have happened to anyone.

“Egypt’s judges are sorry that someone who defended Egypt and its people, judiciary and nation in the face of the terrorist organisation that wanted to bring it down should be punished in this way,” said Abdallah Fathi.

Zend’s predecessor was also forced to resign last May after saying the son of a garbage collector was ineligible to serve as a judge.