Egypt: Ex-President Morsi Faces Jailbreak Trial
In a heavily guarded makeshift courtroom, Mohamed Morsi angrily shouts at a judge: "Who are you, do you know who I am?"
Video: The former president faces charges of breaking out of prison
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A poster of the presidential favourite
Former Egyptian president
Mohamed Morsi has gone on trial charged with breaking out of prison
during the 2011 uprising against Hosni Mubarak.
He and some 130 others, including members of his banned Muslim
Brotherhood, the Islamist Palestinian movement Hamas and Lebanon's Shia
militant group Hizbollah, have been charged over the jailbreak.Some of the defendants have been accused of murdering police officers and assisting the thousands of inmates who escaped from Wadi Natrun jail.
Mr Morsi flew by helicopter from his current prison in Alexandria to the hearing which is being held at a heavily guarded makeshift courtroom in eastern Cairo.
The Islamist leader, who faces two other trials, was deposed by the army in July following massive popular protests against his one-year rule.

"Who are you," he demanded to know, adding "do you know who I am?
"I am the president of the republic. Who are you? Let me hear your voice. I don't hear you."
In response, a judge said: "I am the president of the Cairo Criminal Court."
The trial was later adjourned and will resume on February 22 to allow lawyers to review the case's files.

The powerful military is backing army chief Field Marshal Abdel Fattah al Sisi to run for the presidency after he led the ousting of Egypt's first democratically elected president.
Morsi's trial started amid a government crackdown against the former leader and his Islamist supporters that has seen more than 1,400 people killed since he was deposed, according to Amnesty International.
Most of those killed have been pro-Morsi demonstrators in street clashes with police and his opponents.
The date of the start of the new trial is symbolic as Tuesday marks the third anniversary of the prison break that occurred during the uprising against Hosni Mubarak.
A Brotherhood lawyer has said the trial appears aimed at "denigrating" Morsi and the Brotherhood.
In an earlier court appearance, Morsi insisted he was still the country's legitimate president and challenged the legitimacy of the court, regularly interrupting the judges and prosecutors..
He faces charges in four separate trials, some of which carry the death penalty.
Meanwhile, state news agency Mena reported that gunmen blew up a natural gas pipeline Monday night in the volatile Sinai Peninsula south of el-Arish, the capital of the North Sinai governorate.
Gas pipelines have come under attacks several times since the 2011 downfall of Mubarak with the last attack took place 10 days ago.
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