Retrial of Egypt’s Mubarak Collapses in Chaos
Local Editor
The judge in the retrial of Egyptian former President Hosni Mubarak recused himself on Saturday, in a chaotic opening hearing that lasted just seconds and saw Mubarak smile and wave in the dock.
Judge Mostafa Hassan Abdallah told the court he would send the case to the Court of Appeal, which will then refer the trial to a new circuit, sending the fate of the ousted strongman back to square one.
As the judge filed out of the courtroom, uproar erupted with people shouting and waving their arms. Civil society lawyers attending the trial chanted: "The people want the execution of the president."
In October, the same judge had acquitted the defendants in the infamous "Battle of the Camels" trial, who were accused of sending men on camels and horses to break up a protest during the 2011 uprising that toppled Mubarak.
Mubarak, his former Interior Minister Habib al-Adly and six security chiefs were again in the dock for their complicity in the murder and attempted murder of hundreds of peaceful protesters on January 25-31, 2011."This judge and this circuit acquitted all the defendants in the battle of the camels and there is a lot of doubt over their position. This prevents him from conducting this trial," said Amir Salem, a lawyer for the victims of families.
Months of rumors that Mubarak was in a coma or too weak to attend his retrial were put to rest on Saturday as the former leader seemed healthy and strong as he sat in the defendants' cage, smiling and waving to supporters.
His sons Alaa and Gamal, who are also facing a new trial for corruption, also appeared to be in good spirits as they smiled and chatted to their father.
Earlier on Saturday, television footage showed Mubarak wheeled out of an ambulance on a stretcher and taken into the capital's Police Academy in a Cairo suburb for the hearing.
Mubarak was flown to the academy that was once named after him by helicopter from the Cairo military hospital where he is being treated, the official MENA news agency said. He left the compound the same way.
Mubarak, who turns 85 in May, has suffered several health scares and MENA even reported him clinically dead at one point as he slipped into a coma.
In January, Egypt's highest court, the Court of Cassation, ordered a retrial for Mubarak after accepting an appeal against his life sentence, citing procedural failings.
Legal experts said the original case verged on the farcical, with patchwork evidence and prosecution witnesses exonerating the defendants.
Until Saturday's courtroom turmoil, the fate of the ousted President has been largely eclipsed by deadly violence and economic woes currently gripping Egypt.
Source: News Agencies, Edited by moqawama.org
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