Hisham Muhammad Zaki Barakat was Prosecutor General of Egypt from 2013 to 2015. During his term as state prosecutor, he was responsible for thousands of controversial prosecutions, including several widely deemed as politically motivated resulting in death sentences for hundreds of Muslim Brotherhood members and supporters of deposed Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi. He was assassinated in a car bombing on 29 June 2015.
Early life
Barakat graduated from Cairo University with a B.A. in Law in 1973. Appointed to the Public Prosecution, he joined the judiciary and worked in courts of first instance and appeal courts. He became the head of the technical office of the president of the Cairo Appeals Court.
Barakat was assassinated in a car bombing on 29 June 2015 as he left his home in Heliopolis. According to security sources, the bomb was planted in a parked car and remotely detonated at 10:00 a.m., hitting Barakat's motorcade. After the bombing, Barakat was admitted to al-Nozha hospital where he was pronounced dead at 12:30 p.m. after surgery and the cause of death was stated as "ruptures in the lung and stomach, and internal bleeding". Five guards, two drivers and one civilian were injured during the attack. The death of Barakat was widely grieved and condemned across Egypt. Hours after news of the assassination broke, all private satellite channels in Egypt suspended their programmes and mourned Barakat's death. On 30 June, Al Jazeera reported that Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi announced that Rabaa Square would be renamed after Barakat. The square is the site of the August 2013 Rabaa massacre where more than 800 protesters were killed who were seeking the reinstatement of President Mohamed Morsi after he was deposed in a coup orchestrated by Sisi. This was later denied by sources at the presidency indicating that the naming of streets and squares is not within the purview of the president. On 2 July, Egypt's public prosecution issued a gag order restraining media outlets from reporting updates on the investigation of the case. The gag order will remain in effect until the conclusion of the investigation, while statements on the case and its updates will be issued by the acting prosecutor-general's office. In the aftermath of the assassination, Egyptian Foreign MinisterSameh Shoukry instructed all Egyptian Diplomatic Missions to open books of condolence. On 17 June 2017, Cairo Criminal Court sentenced 31 defendants of the 67 people charged to death in connection with Barakat's assassination in a preliminary judgement. On 22 July 2017, a Cairo criminal court sentenced 28 people to death over Barakat's killing and handed 15 others each 25 years of jail sentences.