EGYPT’S MUBARAK
RELEASED FROM PRISON
Egypt’s ousted leader Hosni Mubarak was released from prison
Thursday and transported to a military hospital in a Cairo suburb where he will
be held under house arrest, according to state TV.Prime Minister Hazem
el-Beblawi had ordered that Mubarak be put under house arrest as part of the
emergency measures imposed this month after a wave of violence sparked by the ouster
of Islamist leader Mohammed Morsi, who had succeeded Mubarak as Egypt’s first
freely elected President.The release threatened to stoke the unrest as the Arab
nation is already roiled in a crisis over a military coup against Morsi.But the
decision to place him under house arrest instead of letting him go free
appeared designed to ease some of the criticism over releasing Mubarak and to
ensure that he appears in court next week for a separate trial.
Despite his release, the 85-year-old ousted leader still faces
retrial on charges of complicity in the killing of protesters in the 2011
uprising against him, which could put him back behind bars. His court case
resumes next week. He also is being investigated in at least two other
corruption cases.State TV said a medically equipped helicopter transported
Mubarak to the military hospital in the southern Maadi suburb.Footage on
private TV stations showed the helicopter carrying Mubarak arrived at the pad
outside the military hospital, on the banks of the Nile. He was immediately
transported to an ambulance, heavily guarded, and moved across the street to
the hospital. Mubarak was not seen during the transport.
Mubarak was held for several weeks of his two years detention in the
same hospital as he underwent medical check-ups. His lawyers had cited bad
conditions in the prison facilities. Prison authorities had renovated a ward
where he was later kept.Since his ouster, Mubarak’s supporters have released
conflicting details about his health, including that he suffered a stroke, a
heart attack and at times went into a coma. His critics called these an attempt
to gain public sympathy and court leniency.His wife, Suzanne, has been living
in Cairo and keeping a low-profile, occasionally visiting Mubarak and their two
sons in prison.The prospect of Mubarak being freed, even if only temporarily,
would feed into the larger crisis bedeviling Egypt: the violent fallout from
the July 3 coup that unseated Morsi.
Prof. John Kurakar
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