Twenty-six men accused of plotting attacks on behalf of Hizbullah on tourist resorts and on ships in the Suez Canal will go on trial in an Egyptian security court on Sunday.
The suspects — two Lebanese, five Palestinians and 19 Egyptians — face charges of "conspiracy to murder, spying for a foreign organization with the intent of conducting terrorist attacks and weapons possession."
Four more accused are on the run and will be tried in absentia, including Lebanese alleged mastermind Mohammed Qabalan who is believed to have left Egypt.
Defense lawyer Abdel Moneim Abdel Maqsoud told Agence France Presse that some of the defendants had confessed to planning attacks against Israelis.
"Those whose names appear on the list, including number two suspect Lebanese Mohammed Youssef Ahmed Mansour known as Sami Shehab, told prosecutors during questioning that they initially planned attacks against Israeli tourists in Sinai in response to the killing of (Hizbullah leader) Imad Mughniyeh, but that orders came from Hizbullah leadership banning such activities," he said.
Mughniyeh, a Hizbullah commander, was killed by a car bombing in Damascus in a February 2008 attack that was blamed on but denied by Israel.
Hizbullah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah admitted in April that Shehab was a Hizbullah agent but said he was only tasked with smuggling weapons to militants into the Gaza Strip.
The defendants said that their main goal was to help Palestinians in Gaza.
Egyptian security forces had said that five of the accused in what is being called the "Hizbullah cell case" belonged to the banned Muslim Brotherhood but that they had left the organization in recent years.
In an interview aired on Monday by the U.S. television network CBS, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak claimed that the Brotherhood had contacts with the Lebanese and Palestinian militant groups Hizbullah and Hamas.
"They have contacts with Hamas. They have contacts with Hizbullah. These are well-known and they have contacts with many organizations," he said, but added: "As long as they do not commit any terrorist crimes, I don”t care."
State security courts were set up under Egypt”s emergency laws which have been in place since 1981. Their verdicts are final.
