Texarkana Gazette

Egypt’s Mubarak free, acquitted after detention

- By Maggie Michael

CAIRO—Far from the cameras that followed him closely over six years of legal wrangling, Egypt’s ousted President Hosni Mubarak quietly returned home to his family on Friday after winning acquittals and release from a Cairo hospital where he has been detained for years.

The 88-year-old onetime autocratic ruler now walks free, acquitted over his role in the killings of hundreds of protesters who defied his rule. He captured the world’s attention when he stepped down in response to an 18-day uprising, and once again when he appeared— then jarringly—behind the bars of the defendant’s cage in a trial that media dubbed “the trial of the century.”

With muted street reaction, his discreet release underscore­d once again the failed aspiration­s of the Arab uprisings that swept across the region in 2011. The hopes carried by Egyptian activists that the former autocrat would be more severely punished for his abuse of power have been scuttled.

While Arab Spring uprisings led to the collapse of central government­s in countries like Yemen, Libya and Syria, Egypt managed to avoid a complete breakdown post Mubarak. But since his ouster, heavy-handed rule has returned to the country in full force, and its economy has tanked.

For many, Mubarak’s authoritar­ian rule for nearly three decades doomed any uprising to failure from the outset, given the depth and pervasiven­ess of institutio­nalized corruption under his leadership.

“Mubarak’s legacy has been complicate­d by the gross crimes committed by his successors, but the abuses institutio­nalized under his regime—corruption, police torture, military trials, emergency-style rule, economic mismanagem­ent— are the ones that afflict most Egyptians today,” said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director for Human Rights Watch.

Mubarak left the Armed Forces Hospital in Cairo’s southern leafy suburb of Maadi, where he has spent most of his detention since the 2011 revolt, and was driven in a motorcade to his home in the upscale Heliopolis district under heavy security, according to an Egyptian security official. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the media.

Mubarak’s lawyer, Farid el-Deeb, told the Al-Masry al-Youm daily that the former president returned home with his sons, Alaa and Gamal, and that the entire family, including Mubarak’s wife, Suzanne, celebrated his return by having breakfast together.

His lengthy trial unfolded alongside a series of national upheavals: the rise and fall of Islamists in 2013, and the military seizing power with its strongman, army chief-turned-president AbdelFatta­h el-Sissi, who won the presidency in 2014.

Many of Mubarak’s opponents and supporters alike believe that since his ouster the country is now worse off. El-Sissi has restored military-heavy authoritar­ian rule and taken severe, purportedl­y corrective, economic measures that have left millions of Egyptians reeling.

A Mubarak supporter, Sameh Ahmed, whose business was badly hurt from the last currency flotation and devaluatio­n, expressed his enduring loyalty for the former leader, saying: “Mubarak is my president.”

“I hope Mubarak returns back to power,” said Ahmed, “I was living in better conditions during Mubarak’s time than nowadays.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? n Former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak waves to his supporters from behind bars as he attends a hearing in his retrial appeal on April 13, 2013, in Cairo.
Associated Press n Former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak waves to his supporters from behind bars as he attends a hearing in his retrial appeal on April 13, 2013, in Cairo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States