Mubarak back in court for retrial

Mubarak back in court for retrial
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Mubarak back in court for retrial
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Updated 12 May 2013
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Mubarak back in court for retrial

Mubarak back in court for retrial

CAIRO: Former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak was back in court yesterday for a retrial on charges of complicity in the murder of protesters, reopening a case that has shown the difficulty of transitional justice in post-revolutionary Egypt.
The retrial was adjourned until June 8, the presiding judge said.
Mubarak and his former Interior Minister, Habib El-Adli, were convicted and sentenced to life in prison last June for failing to stop the killing during the 2011 uprising that swept him from power. But a court ordered a retrial in January after accepting appeals from both the prosecution and the defence.
Each cited different shortcomings with a trial that was criticized for the weak evidence offered by the prosecution.
After a three-hour session broadcast live on state television, during which the charges were read and the prosecution made a statement, the proceedings were adjourned. The next hearing was set for June 8.
Mubarak, 85, sat upright on a hospital gurney as he was wheeled into a cage where defendants appear. As he entered, some in the courtroom chanted: “The people want the butcher executed.”
Wearing aviator sunglasses, he raised his arm to confirm his presence as Judge Ahmed Al-Rasheedy read a list of the accused and said, “Present.” He waved his arm in denial when asked by the judge to respond to the charges.
His two sons, Alaa and Gamal, stood alongside him dressed in white prison uniforms. They face charges of corruption.
The retrial at a police academy on the outskirts of Cairo had been due to begin last month but was delayed when the previous judge recused himself.
Mubarak is being held at Torah Prison on the outskirts of the capital. He remains in jail despite release orders because he faces charges in a separate corruption case.
Outside the court, a small group of protesters gathered under a baking sun held aloft banners demanding justice.
“Your mother misses you, Ahmed,” read one banner, referring to a demonstrator killed in 2011. A rival group of a dozen Mubarak loyalists held aloft pictures of the former president dressed in military uniform and business suits.