Business Day

Egypt’s ‘pharaoh’ Hosni Mubarak dies

• Critics saw the military strongman as out of touch with the lives of most Egyptians, embracing the elite while poor people grappled with high inflation

- Tarek El-Tablawy and Alaa Shahine Cairo/London

Egypt Hosni’Mubarak, s longest-serving who became ruler in more than 150 years before being forced from office by a popular uprising, has died. He was 91.

Hosni Mubarak, who became Egypt’s longest-serving ruler in more than 150 years before being forced from office by a popular uprising, has died. He was 91.

His death was announced on Tuesday by state TV. No cause was mentioned, though his family said recently he had been in hospital.

Dubbed the “pharaoh” by detractors, Mubarak ruled for 30 years and was widely thought to be preparing his younger son Gamal as successor when the Arab Spring surged into Cairo in January 2011. After 18 days of mass protests, he was gone, his image of an all-powerful ruler shredded.

Mubarak attended his trial for the killing of more than 850 protesters by security forces in the final days of his regime in a hospital bed and faced other serious charges, but was found guilty only of fraud and avoided serving additional time in jail.

In photograph­s, a man famously known for jet-black dyed hair and swagger was seen seated, tired and greying.

Mohammed Hosni Said Mubarak was born on May 4 1928 in Kafr El Meselha in the Nile Delta. Opting for a military career when Egypt was still a monarchy, he entered the Air

Force Academy in 1950. Four years later, King Farouk was overthrown in a coup led by Gamal Abdel Nasser.

In 1964, Mubarak was appointed head of the Egyptian military delegation to the Soviet Union, the sole supplier of weapons to Nasser’s regime.

From 1967 to 1972, he served as air force chief of staff, became deputy minister for military affairs and was promoted to air marshal after the 1973 ArabIsrael war.

GUNNED DOWN

After Nasser’s death, Egypt was led by president Anwar Sadat, who appointed Mubarak as vice-president in April 1975, effectivel­y designatin­g him as heir apparent.

That succession came earlier than expected, with Sadat gunned down by Muslim fundamenta­lists on October 6 1981, during an annual parade commemorat­ing the 1973 war against Israel.

Sadat was killed while Mubarak, seated next to him, escaped with a hand wound.

Mubarak cracked down on violent groups and went on to govern in a low-key, stolid style that contrasted with the glitter of the Sadat years.

“Having Sadat as president was like being married to Miss World,” Layla Takla, an opposition MP, said at the time.

“It was great for a while, but then you needed someone to do the cooking and look after the children.”

While Mubarak provided some room for dissent within red lines that included no criticism of his family, he failed to follow through on pledges to open the political system.

Suppressio­n of a wide array of perceived rivals, under an emergency law promulgate­d in 1981, marked his years in power and helped fuel the discontent that led to his downfall.

In the late 1980s, the country was on the verge of bankruptcy when it stopped paying foreign debts. It was only when Mubarak agreed to send forces as part of the US-led coalition to expel Iraqi troops from Kuwait in 1990 that creditors agreed to write off debts.

FOREIGN INVESTMENT

In 2004, Mubarak appointed a government that revived the sale of state assets. By 2009, it attracted more than $40bn of foreign direct investment in industries such as oil and gas, and telecoms. Emirates Telecom and Italian bank Intesa Sanpaolo were drawn to the country.

But critics saw him as out of touch with most Egyptians — embracing the elite while the poor grappled with inflation topping 20% in 2008.

His supporters blamed rapid population growth and economic mismanagem­ent of past administra­tions for the ills of a nation of 85-million people at the time of his fall.

Egypt’s per-capita GDP in 2009 was $2,160, almost identical to $2,155 a decade earlier, according to IMF data.

Mubarak never backtracke­d on the policy of diplomatic rapprochem­ent with Israel, though his only visit to Israel was for the funeral of assassinat­ed Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin in 1995. He managed to restore links with Arab rulers who were enraged by Sadat’s decision to sign a peace treaty with Israel.

“There isn’t among us anyone who wants to take the region back to the destructio­n of war or to the phase of no war and no peace,” he told Arab leaders in 1996. “We are sincerely determined to struggle for peace until the end.”

KEY ALLIANCE

Mubarak also retained Egypt’s alliance with the US, which began with Sadat’s noisy break with the Soviet Union. Egypt gets about $1.3bn a year in US military aid.

He presided over several years in which domestic Islamic extremism flared in Egypt. In 1997, violence reached a zenith when 58 foreign tourists in Luxor were shot. The massacre, which harmed Egypt’s tourism industry, turned many Egyptians firmly against religious violence.

The Muslim Brotherhoo­d, an Islamist movement that had renounced violence in the 1970s, gained in popularity amid dissatisfa­ction over corruption and economic inequality.

His experience­s at home prompted warnings to his allies. In September 2001, he chided the West for failing to take terrorism seriously, warning that serious events were imminent.

A few days later, on September 11, al-Qaeda struck the US.

‘GATES OF HELL’

Mubarak opposed the 2003 USled invasion of Iraq, warning that “the gates of hell” would be opened in the Middle East.

He argued that the IsraeliPal­estinian conflict should be tackled as the first step to regional peace.

He tried to end rivalry between Palestinia­n Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and Hamas, an Islamic movement that took over the Gaza Strip in 2007 but faced criticism at home and in several Arab countries for keeping Gaza’s border largely closed as Israel sealed its frontier with the coastal enclave.

It was his ever-tighter grip on domestic freedoms that proved his undoing.

In 2005, Mubarak had opened presidenti­al elections to multiple candidates. Yet the regulation­s were so restrictiv­e that no strong challenger­s emerged; the runner-up, lawyer Ayman Nour, won only 7% of the vote to Mubarak’s 88%.

After the election, Nour was jailed for four years on fraud charges that human-rights groups say were trumped up.

In elections later that year, the Muslim Brotherhoo­d won 88 seats in the 454-member parliament, a surprise result that prompted a crackdown on Islamic activists and on antiMubara­k secular politician­s, judges, newspaper editors, bloggers and street demonstrat­ors.

Hundreds of Brotherhoo­d activists were rounded up, and some were put on trial in closed-door military courts.

Mubarak’s fall came at the hands of an unexpected coalition of opposition parties, the Brotherhoo­d and, most poignantly, a youth movement whose Facebook- and Twitter-driven demonstrat­ions mobilised the streets.

Mubarak never officially designated anyone as his likely successor, only appointing intelligen­ce chief Omar Suleiman as vice-president in January 2011 in a bid to defuse mounting protests. The rise of his son Gamal up the ranks of the ruling National Democratic Party led Egyptians to conjecture that he would succeed his father.

Instead, that job went, briefly, to Islamist president Mohamed Morsi and then after a 2013 military-backed revolt to former army chief Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi, who has dragged Egypt back to the brand of autocracy mastered by Mubarak.

Mubarak is survived by his wife, Suzanne Thabet, and sons Gamal and Alaa.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Toppled pharaoh: Former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak was deposed after providing some room for dissent but failing to follow through on his promises to open the political system.
/Reuters Toppled pharaoh: Former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak was deposed after providing some room for dissent but failing to follow through on his promises to open the political system.

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