South Cairo Court will consider Saturday the first trial session of 739 Muslim Brotherhood (MB) defendants, including the group's Supreme Guide Mohamed Badie, in the case publicly known as "Rabaa sit-in," Al Bawaba news reported. Prosecution accused the defendants of staging an armed sit-in, banditry, premeditated murder, rioting, possessing unlicensed weapons and terrorizing citizens. The defendants' list includes ousted president Mohamed Morsi's son, Osama, photo-journalist Mahmoud Shawkan as well as top MB leaders. MB supporters staged the Rabaa sit-in to demand the reinstatement of Morsi, who was removed amid mass street protests, known in local media as the June 30 Revolution. The sit-in, that the Egyptian security circles considered armed, was dispersed in August 14, 2013. Interim authorities following the removal of the MB classified the Islamist group as terrorist based on a string of deadly blasts, claiming hundreds of lives, mostly among police and military personnel in the restive Sinai Peninsula.