The prison system in Egypt may have led directly to the death of President Mohamed Morsi, according to a statement by the Special Rapporteur on arbitrary executions and the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention.

Morsi was held in conditions that can only be described as brutal, held in solitary confinement for 23 hours a day, forced to sleep on a concrete floor, and denied continuous treatment for diabetes and hypertension.

The UN statement concluded that the death of Morsi after enduring all these circumstances can amount to arbitrary killing approved by the Egyptian state.

According to the statement issued by Kalamar that UN experts have received credible evidence from various sources that thousands of detainees in Egypt may suffer serious violations, and may be at risk of death.

The statement concluded that this is a deliberate practice by the current government of President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi to silence dissidents.

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The Egyptian authorities announced on June 17 the death of Morsi after suffering a fainting during his trial session.

Many suspicions about Morsi's death have been raised by politicians, parliamentarians, jurists, and the UN Human Rights Commission. Health, and his death is normal.

Mohamed Morsi is the first elected civilian president in Egypt's modern history. After a transitional year, Sisi took over the presidency, and has been there until now, while Morsi was imprisoned and charged in many cases.