Cairo: An Egyptian court on Saturday sentenced 28 people to death by hanging after convicting them of involvement in the murder of the country’s chief prosecutor Hesham Barakat in a bombing more than two years ago.

Fifteen co-defendants were given life sentences and eight others jail terms for 15 years each. The Cairo Criminal Court, which heard the case, also handed 15 other accused 10 years in prison each.

The court dropped the charges against one accused who had died in jail during the trial that started in June last year.

All verdicts can be appealed.

Last month, the court recommended death sentences for 30 defendants in the case. The verdicts were later referred to the Grand Mufti, Egypt’s top religious authority, to approve or reject — a routine procedure in the country for death sentences.

Barakat was killed on June 29, 2015 when a car bomb went off near his convoy in the Cairo quarter of Heliopolis. He was 64.

He was the highest Egyptian official to be killed in a wave of militant violence that has hit Egypt since the 2013 army’s toppling of Islamist president Mohammad Mursi following massive street protests against his rule.

Egypt blamed Mursi’s Muslim Brotherhood and the Palestinian Hamas group for Barakat’s killing, charges both movements have denied. Over the past four years, hundreds of the now-outlawed Brotherhood members have been detained and jailed in different cases on charges of inciting or involvement in violence in Egypt.