Global Times - Weekend

World: Ousted Egypt pres Mubarak freed

After 6 years in detention, toppled leader returns home

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Hosni Mubarak, the former Egyptian president toppled during the 2011 “Arab Spring,” left a military hospital on Friday where he spent much of the last six years in detention.

The release of the 88-year old who ruled Egypt for three decades would have been unthinkabl­e several years ago, but revolution­ary fervor gave way to exhaustion and even nostalgia in the uprising’s chaotic aftermath.

Mubarak had been cleared for release earlier this month after a top court finally acquitted him of involvemen­t in protester deaths during the 2011 revolt that ousted him.

“Yes,” his lawyer Farid alDeeb told AFP when asked if Mubarak had left the hospital on Friday.

He added the Mubarak had gone home to a villa in Cairo’s Heliopolis district.

Mubarak was accused of inciting the deaths of protesters during the 18-day revolt, in which about 850 people were killed as police clashed with demonstrat­ors.

He was sentenced to life in jail in 2012 in the case, but an appeals court ordered a retrial which dismissed the charges two years later.

Egypt’s top appeals court on March 2 acquitted him of involvemen­t in the killings.

Throughout his trial, prosecutor­s had been unable to provide conclusive evidence of Mubarak’s complicity – a result, lawyers said, of having hastily put together the case against him in 2011 following demonstrat­ions.

In January 2016, the ap- peals court upheld a 3-year prison sentence for Mubarak and his two sons on corruption charges.

But the sentence took into account time served. Both of his sons, Alaa and Gamal, were freed.

On Thursday, a court ordered a renewed corruption investigat­ion into Mubarak for allegedly receiving gifts from the state owned Al-Ahram newspaper.

He is also banned from travel.

Meanwhile, several key activists in the 2011 uprising are now serving lengthy jail terms, and rights groups say hundreds of others have been forcibly disappeare­d.

The anti-Mubarak revolt ushered in instabilit­y that drove away tourists and investors, taking a heavy toll on the economy and leading to nostalgia for his rule.

His successor Mohamed Morsi, an Islamist, ruled for only a year after his 2012 election before the military overthrew him, prompted by massive protests against his Muslim Brotherhoo­d group.

Morsi’s overthrow ushered in a deadly police crackdown that killed hundreds of protesters demanding his reinstatem­ent.

The military chief who toppled him, Abdel Fattah alSisi, won election as president the following year.

Morsi’s overthrow helped rehabilita­te some Mubarak-era politician­s, including a former senior member of his National Democratic Party who served as prime minister under Sisi.

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