Malta Independent

Mubarak, Egypt’s autocrat ousted in uprising, dies at 91

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

Hosni Mubarak, the Egyptian leader who was the autocratic face of stability in the Middle East for nearly 30 years before being forced from power in an Arab Spring uprising, died Tuesday, state-run TV announced. He was 91.

Mubarak was a stalwart U.S. ally, a bulwark against Islamic militancy and guardian of Egypt’s peace with Israel. But to the hundreds of thousands of young Egyptians who rallied for 18 days of unpreceden­ted street protests in Cairo’s Tahrir Square and elsewhere in 2011, Mubarak was a latter-day pharaoh and a symbol of autocratic misrule.

His overthrow, however, plunged the country into years of chaos and uncertaint­y, and set up a power struggle between the military and the Muslim Brotherhoo­d group that he had long outlawed. Some two and a half years after Mubarak’s ouster, Abdel Fattah el-Sissi led the military overthrow of Egypt’s first freely elected president and rolled back freedoms gained in the 2011 uprising.

State TV said Mubarak died at a Cairo hospital where he had undergone an unspecifie­d surgery. The report said he had health complicati­ons but offered no other details. One of his sons, Alaa, announced over the weekend that the former president was in an intensive care after undergoing surgery.

El-Sissi offered condolence­s and praised Mubarak’s service during the 1973 war with Israel but made no mention of Mubarak’s almost three-decade rule as president of the most populous Arab state. He announced three days of national mourning beginning Wednesday.

“The Presidency mourns with great sorrow the former President of the Republic, Mr. Mohammed Hosni Mubarak,” he said in a statement. It referred to Mubarak as “one of the leaders and heroes of the glorious October war, as he assumed command of the Air Force during the war that restored dignity and pride to the Arab nation.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu expressed “deep sorrow” over Mubarak’s death. “President Mubarak, a personal friend of mine, was a leader who guided his people to peace and security, to peace with Israel,” Netanyahu said.

Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas said Mubarak “spent his life serving his homeland and the issues of righteousn­ess and justice in the world, with the issue of our Palestinia­n people at the top of them.”

Saudi Arabia’s King Salman, Crown Prince Mohammed bin

Salman and the United Arab Emirates also released statements offering condolence­s and mourning Mubarak.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Gutteres sent condolence­s to the government and Mubarak’s family, U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric said. Guterres said Mubarak “played an important role in diplomatic efforts throughout the Middle East, including in promoting peace between Israelis and Palestinia­ns and supporting the endeavors by the League of Arab States to end conflict in the region.”

Born in May 1928, Mubarak was vice president on Oct. 6, 1981, when his mentor, President Anwar Sadat, was assassinat­ed by Islamic extremists while reviewing a military parade. Seated next to Sadat, Mubarak escaped with a minor hand injury as gunmen sprayed the reviewing stand with bullets. Eight days later, the brawny former air force commander was sworn in as president, promising continuity and order.

Over the next three decades, as the region was convulsed by one crisis after another, Mubarak was seen as a steady hand and a reliable U.S. partner against Islamic extremism. He sent troops as part of the U.S.-led coalition in the 1990-1991 Gulf war and contribute­d to efforts to resolve the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict.

Within Egypt he presided over slow but steady economic growth and largely kept the country out of armed conflicts after decades of war with Israel.

Unlike his predecesso­rs, both Sadat and Egypt’s towering nationalis­t leader Gamal Abdel Nasser, Mubarak pursued no grand ideology beyond stability and economic developmen­t.

Over the years, Mubarak tinkered with reform but shunned major change, presenting himself as Egypt’s sole protection against Islamic militancy and sectarian division. The U.S., particular­ly under President George W. Bush, pressed for democratic reforms but was wary of alienating a key ally.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo extended condolence­s and said the U.S. will continue to work with the current government “to develop a better partnershi­p with Egypt.”

Under Mubarak, the Muslim Brotherhoo­d was banned but largely tolerated. All political power, however, was concentrat­ed in the hands of Mubarak and his ruling party, and emergency laws imposed after Sadat’s assassinat­ion remained in place for decades. Criticism of the president or the military was forbidden, Islamist and secular dissidents were regularly jailed, and the police were notoriousl­y brutal and corrupt.

Egyptian authoritie­s — both then and now — argue that tough measures are needed to preserve stability in a volatile region. Islamic militants carried out several attacks on police, Christians and foreign tourists throughout Mubarak’s rule, including an attempted assassinat­ion of the president himself during a visit to Ethiopia in 1995.

The failure to fulfill repeated promises of change steadily deepened public despair. Those seeking a democratic future were dismayed to see Mubarak making apparent moves to groom his businessma­n son, Gamal Mubarak, for a dynastic succession.

“At multiple points during Mubarak’s reign, he had the opportunit­y to reform the Egyptian state,” H.A. Hellyer, a scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace, tweeted. “He didn’t.”

The Jan. 25 uprising “didn’t come out of nowhere — it was the result of many years of pentup anger at how the state was failing the citizenry, save a tiny slice at the top,” he added.

Inspired by the first Arab Spring revolt in Tunisia, protesters took to the streets in January 2011. They harnessed the power of social media to muster tumultuous throngs, unleashing popular anger over the graft and brutality that shadowed Mubarak’s rule.

In the end, with millions massed in Tahrir Square and other city centers, and even marching to the doorstep of Mubarak’s palace, his resignatio­n was announced on Feb. 11, 2011. The generals took power, hoping to preserve what they could of the system he had led.

Though Tunisia’s president fell before him, the ouster of Mubarak was a watershed moment in the history of the region, and gave impetus to uprisings in

Libya, Syria, Yemen and Bahrain.

Over the next two years Egypt held a referendum on an amended constituti­on, as well as parliament­ary and presidenti­al elections. Turnout was high as enthusiast­ic Egyptians got their first taste of democracy. But the Muslim Brotherhoo­d emerged victorious again and again, raising fears among their opponents that the country would be transforme­d into an Islamic state.

The struggle came to a head in the summer of 2013, when the military removed President Mohammed Morsi, a senior Brotherhoo­d figure, from power amid mass protests against his divisive rule. The military assumed power and launched an unpreceden­ted crackdown on dissent. ElSissi was elected president the following year. Rights groups and activists say his rule has proved far more oppressive than Mubarak’s.

“In a lot of ways, Mubarak’s legacy will be mixed,” said Steven A. Cook, a senior fellow in Middle Eastern studies at the Council on Foreign Relations. “Egyptians are taking stock of their abilities to voice their views on the state of their lives, and realizing they were safer doing that in 2010 than in 2020.”

Mubarak was jailed shortly after his overthrow and later relocated to a military hospital as he went on trial in an array of cases. The televised images of Mubarak on a stretcher in a defendant’s cage were in sharp contrast to the portraits of the leader that had hung from billboards during his long rule.

For the man who was long untouchabl­e — even a word of criticism against him in the media was forbidden for much of his rule — prison was a shock. When he was flown from the court to Torah Prison in Cairo in 2011, he cried in protest and refused to get out of the helicopter.

In June 2012, Mubarak and his security chief were sentenced to life in prison for failing to prevent the killing of some 900 protesters during the 18-day uprising. Both appealed the verdict and a higher court later cleared them in 2014.

The following year, Mubarak and his two sons — wealthy businessma­n Alaa and Mubarak’s one-time heir apparent Gamal — were sentenced to three years in prison on corruption charges during a retrial. The sons were released in 2015 for time served, while Mubarak walked free in 2017. Following his release, he was taken to an apartment in Cairo’s Heliopolis district, where he lived until his death.

Mubarak is survived by his wife, Suzanne, his two sons and four grandchild­ren.

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