
A top court in the United Arab Emirates on Sunday sentenced four Emiratis to death after convicting them of joining the Islamic State jihadist group in Syria, local media reported.
The four, who are being tried in absentia, are part of a group of 11 defendants accused of "joining the terrorist Daesh group in an Arab country," the official WAM news agency said, using an Arabic acronym for IS.
Local newspapers said that the group had travelled to Syria.
They were also charged with "promoting" IS online, helping to finance the group and insulting UAE leaders, WAM said.
Three other Emiratis, a Bahraini, a Mauritanian, and a Syrian were handed jail sentences of between three and 10 years, the local Gulf News daily reported. Another Emirati was acquitted in the case.
Abu Dhabi's Federal Supreme Court does not allow international media access to such trials.
The UAE is a member of the US-led coalition that has been bombing IS jihadists in Iraq and Syria since September 2014.
UAE authorities have enacted tougher anti-terror legislation, including harsher jail terms and even introducing the death penalty for crimes linked to religious hatred and extremist groups.
In July, the UAE executed an Emirati woman for the jihadist-inspired 2014 murder of an American school teacher in an Abu Dhabi shopping mall.
Her husband is accused of seeking to carry out attacks on targets including Abu Dhabi's Formula 1 circuit and has reportedly claimed to be the local leader of IS. He is currently on trial.
Source: AFP
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