Michele Bachelet said sentences handed to detainees were a result of an ‘unfair trial’.

The UN’s human rights chief, Michelle Bachelet, has asked Egypt to overturn mass death sentences handed down to members of the opposition, including senior members of the Muslim Brotherhood.

On Saturday, an Egyptian court delivered death sentences to 75 people over their participation in a 2013 sit-in protest at Rabaa al-Adawiya Square in Cairo that ended with security forces killing hundreds of protesters.

Those present were protesting a military coup a month earlier, which overthrew Egypt’s first freely elected president, Mohamed Morsi – a member of the Muslim Brotherhood.

If carried out, the sentences “would represent a gross and irreversible miscarriage of justice”, Bachelet said, further describing the trials as “unfair”.

Defendants were denied the right to individual lawyers and to present evidence, while “the prosecution did not provide sufficient evidence to prove individual guilt”, she added in a statement.

Brotherhood leaders Essam el-Erian and Mohamed Beltagi were sentenced to death, while Mohamed Badie, the Brotherhood’s spiritual leader, was handed a life sentence.

In total 46 people were handed life sentences, while 612 others received prison terms ranging from five to 15 years after a mass trial in Cairo.

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Among those convicted of a jail term was photojournalist Mahmoud Abu Zeid, known as Shawkan. He was handed a five-year sentence but should walk free for time served.

The journalist has been imprisoned since he was picked up by security forces in August 2013 while covering the killings in Cairo.

Al Jazeera’s journalist Abdullah Elshamy was also sentenced to 15 years in absentia.

In a statement on Saturday, Al Jazeera condemned his sentencing as “a continuation of the Egyptian authorities’ efforts to silence Al Jazeera and its journalists and to deter and intimidate the Network from covering developments in Egypt”.

Amnesty International condemned the mass sentences as a “disgrace”.