"The title 'martyr' is given to Muslims who die during battle or are killed by enemies," Shawki Allam said, when questioned on whether slain protesters could be called "martyrs".
The content of Friday sermons are controlled by the state [Getty] |
"They are not martyrs. They cannot be given this honourable title," he added.
On Monday, the grand mufti's consultant, Ibrahim Negm, repeated Allam's ruling, saying that protesters killed by security forces in unauthorised rallies could not be considered martyrs.
Last week, Egypt's ministry of religious endowments issued a model Friday sermon across the country for preachers to urge mosque-goers to ignore "destructive calls to destabilise the nation", referring indirectly to the protests on January 25.
Police have also tried to deter possible protesters from heading to the streets once again.
Police chief Medhat al-Minshawi recently said: "Anyone who thinks about breaking the law or terrorising peaceful citizens on January 25 can only blame themselves for what happens. We are prepared to sacrifice our lives to protect the county."
A recent string of highly publicised deaths and torture in police custody have fuelled public outrage as the fifth anniversary of the January 25 revolution approaches.
Long-running police abuses, including the brutal killing of a young man in 2010 at the hands of two policemen, fuelled the 18-day uprising that overthrew president Hosni Mubarak in 2011.
Mubarak was succeeded in 2012 by the Muslim Brotherhood's Mohamed Morsi, who lasted a year in power before he was ousted by the military following massive rallies demanding the Islamist's resignation.