A judge in Cairo has adjourned the trial of deposed Egyptian President Mohammed Mursi along with 14 members of the Muslim Brotherhood.<br /><br />Proceedings were delayed by two hours after Morsi refused to wear a prison uniform, part of his refusal to recognise the court.<br /><br />Once the hearing did get underway, the judge then had to halt the trial after chants by the defendants proved too disruptive to continue.<br /><br />Mursi is facing charges of inciting the killing of protesters outside the presidential palace as opposition to his rule spread earlier this year.<br /><br />Mursi replaced Hosni Mubarak as Egyptian president following a democratic election, but over the course of his 13-month rule he fell into conflict with a number of key institutions.<br /><br />As discontent spread, the army stepped in and removed him from power in July. <br /><br />Since then the interim government has cracked down on the Muslim Brotherhood and has arrested hundreds of its members. <br /><br />Cairo is on edge and many believe the trial will further deepen divisions within the country and lead to yet more instability and violence.