http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2012/1081/fr2.htm
19 - 25 January 2012
Issue No. 1081
Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875
Defence: Mubarak knew nothing
Hosni Mubarak's defence opened by attempting to place responsibility for the 
deaths of protesters squarely on the shoulders of the military, reports Gamal 
Essam El-Din 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Farid El-Deeb, the lawyer leading the defence of Hosni Mubarak, blamed the 
Armed Forces for the deaths of hundreds of peaceful protesters during the heady 
days of the 25 January Revolution in a move many will interpret as a settling 
of scores between the former president and his long time minister of defence, 
Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi.

According to El-Deeb, after protesters filled Tahrir Square on 28 January the 
then interior minister Habib El-Adli contacted Mubarak to concede that the 
police had lost control of the situation. "As a result," said El-Deeb, "Mubarak 
exercised his constitutional rights to impose a curfew and entrust the army 
with maintaining security across the country." 

"From 4pm on 28 January, the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces [SCAF] was in 
full control of Egypt. Law 183/1952 is clear on this: in times of riots and 
wide-scale disturbances the army must be allowed to impose security and restore 
order. In such instances control of non-military security forces passes to the 
army." 

"[Former] president Hosni Mubarak was disposed of all his responsibilities. 
They were delegated to SCAF and its leader, Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi."

The responsibility for any deaths of protesters or injuries sustained after 4pm 
on 28 January cannot, El-Deeb continued, be placed on the former president or 
the police. "President Mubarak could not have issued orders to open on anyone 
after this time. It is the minister of war [now defence], the military ruler, 
who took charge and should be held responsible."

Mubarak, El-Deeb continued, did not subsequently intervene to stop the killing 
of protesters because he was unaware that they were being killed.

Lawyers representing the families of protesters shot dead by the police were 
infuriated by El-Deeb continually referring to anyone demonstrating against 
Mubarak's rule as a rioter. And under legislation in force since 1923, El-Deeb 
told the court, "the police have every right to open fire on rioters who attack 
them."

El-Deeb quoted testimony given in April by Omar Suleiman, Mubarak's chief of 
general intelligence and vice president, to the effect that "saboteurs had 
infiltrated peaceful protesters and began attacking police stations". He added 
that the testimonies of former interior ministers Mahmoud Wagdi and Mansour 
Eissawi confirmed that the police had been placed in a situation where they 
were forced to defend themselves as saboteurs and arsonists attacked police 
stations.

El-Deeb also cited a story that appeared in the state-owned Al-Akhbar newspaper 
last January as providing mitigating evidence. The story alleged that "armed 
elements of the Shia party Hizbullah and the Islamist Hamas movement had 
managed to infiltrate Egypt through underground tunnels in Sinai to launch a 
series of subversive acts, including storming the headquarters of the Radio and 
Television Union and torching the headquarters of the NDP."

El-Deeb claimed that Mubarak did his best to respond to the demands of peaceful 
protesters: "Unlike other leaders in the Arab world he did not issue orders to 
open fire on protesters and he never sought to leave the country." 

He also claimed that violent clashes in Mohamed Mahmoud Street last November 
and in Qasr Al-Aini Street in December confirmed that gangs of armed rioters, 
rather than peaceful demonstrators, were behind the street protests. 

In a scathing attack against the prosecution El-Deeb singled out Mustafa 
Suleiman, the chief prosecutor who oversaw the investigation into allegations 
against Mubarak and his two sons, Alaa and Gamal, for particular scorn. 

"The chief prosecutor began by politicising the case. Instead of focussing on 
criminal charges, he concentrated on the political issue of succession though 
this is not on the charge sheet levelled against president Mubarak. He spoke 
ill of Mubarak's wife Suzanne, insulting her although she is not one of the 
defendants, and accusing her of orchestrating the succession scenario. Yet he 
never offered any clear evidence about this alleged scenario." 

"Why," El-Deeb asked rhetorically, "did the chief prosecutor focus on the issue 
of succession? The answer is that he wanted to make it a hot topic for the 
media. He wanted to slander president Mubarak and his family and defame their 
reputations."

Article 1130 of the law on criminal procedures, said El-Deeb, obliges 
prosecutors not to direct insults to defendants without clear evidence "yet the 
chief prosecutor took the floor to launch a smear campaign against my client 
despite the fact that charges against him are unfounded and have no documentary 
evidence to back them". 

Having cited a report by the state-owned Al-Akhbar in defence of Mubarak, 
El-Deeb then accused prosecutors of relying on unconfirmed press reports to 
smear his client.

"There is not one shred of evidence against my client. All the charges are 
based on false information and hearsay." 

El-Deeb accused lawyers representing the families of those killed in the 
revolution of grandstanding, of seeking to use the case to further their own 
fame.

"My client," he concluded, "is a victim of malicious accusations. Mubarak is an 
honourable man who has done no wrong. He placed the law above everything and 
worked tirelessly to serve the nation. He was neither a tyrant nor a 
bloodthirsty man. He respected the judiciary and did his best during his terms 
in office to ensure its independence." 

El-Deeb took a little over an hour in opening his defence of Mubarak. He then 
asked for five sessions to be allocated to the defence. The first session -- on 
17 January -- would, he said, involve a verbal defence of Mubarak while the 
other sessions would be given over to presenting documents proving Mubarak's 
innocence.

El-Deeb had begun by reviewing Mubarak's military and political record: "He 
served for 30 years in the army and 30 years in politics working for his 
nation. He toiled honestly to further the interests of Egypt and nobody has the 
right to smear his achievements." 

Mubarak, 83, was wheeled into the courtroom on a stretcher.

The trial of the former president was set to resume today. It is scheduled to 
end on 16 February when a date will be set for the verdict to be delivered. 


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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