As Mubarak trial set to begin, Arab leaders take note

Ousted Egyptian leader faces charges including killing protesters, corruption, squandering public wealth in Israel gas deal.

Defaced Mubarak statue, Egypt_311 (photo credit: Reuters)
Defaced Mubarak statue, Egypt_311
(photo credit: Reuters)
Deposed Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak goes on trial Wednesday over his role in killing protesters, in a stark message to Arab rulers elsewhere that they too may one day be held to account.
The allegations against Mubarak include participating with former Oil Minister Sameh Fahmy and businessman Hussein Salem in squandering public wealth in a natural-gas deal with Israel. Fahmy and Salem are on trial separately over that deal.
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Mubarak’s sons, Alaa and Gamal, are also charged with crimes allegedly committed in association with their father. Former interior minister Habib al-Adli and six police officers will be tried as well.
In domestic politics, putting the former president in the dock may help quell criticism of the generals now running Egypt, suspected by protesters of protecting their former commander.
Egyptians camped out in Cairo for more than three weeks in July demanded faster reforms by the army council, in power since Mubarak was ousted on February 11 – including swifter trials of Mubarak and his aides over corruption and protester deaths.
Mubarak was ordered to stand trial on May 24 for his role in killing protesters, as well as for alleged financial improprieties and abuse of power.
Many suspect the military of foot-dragging over Mubarak, who has been hospitalized since April in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el- Sheikh.
If convicted, Mubarak could face the death penalty. But few expect that outcome, even if some protesters want it.
Many Egyptians will be pleased just to see him in court and in the cage where defendants in Egyptian criminal trials stand. Ironically, one has been erected in the police academy in Cairo, which was named after Mubarak. His name has since been stripped off.

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A source close to Mubarak said last week that his lawyer would tell the judge that his client was too ill to attend. But the health minister said on Tuesday he could be moved.
Protesters are likely be enraged if he does not come.
“The trial of Mubarak is a lesson to candidates for the presidency to know the fate of those who try to violate the freedom of the people, or become autocratic,” said senior Muslim Brotherhood member Essam el-Erian.
He was speaking to the state-run daily Al-Ahram, a newspaper that would never have run a statement from the group while Mubarak was in power and the Brotherhood was banned. The group has now emerged as one of several influential political forces.
The message may have already reached Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi and Syria’s President Bashar Assad, who have shown no sign of quitting. Nor have they offered concessions akin to those Mubarak offered in vain in his final days in office when he named a vice president and pledged not to seek another term.
Gulf Arab states may also have been watching Egypt closely. An army source told Reuters that Saudi Arabia and others were quietly pressing the army to spare Mubarak, a former ally. His trial sets an uncomfortable precedent for Arab autocrats.
But in an interview with Egyptian television, the Saudi ambassador to Cairo denied any such intervention, saying that Riyadh’s links with Mubarak had ended the day he stepped down and that his trial was a matter for Egyptians.
Mubarak is not the first Arab leader to be tried since the start of this year’s ‘Arab Spring.’ Tunisian President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali was tried and sentenced in absentia because he fled to Saudi Arabia.
Mubarak stayed in Egypt, swearing to die there.
Charges range from conspiring over the killing of demonstrators, to abuse of power to amass wealth.
The court was originally planned to be set up in an exhibition and convention center near central Cairo, but was later moved to the police academy on Cairo’s outskirts.
It is the same complex where Mubarak delivered a speech on January 23, just two days before protests erupted. Much of his address discussed the bombing of a church at the start of 2011.
“I and all Egyptians salute policemen on their day of celebration and affirm our pride in their role and sacrifice. We tell them: We appreciate all your efforts to fight crime in all its forms and your handling of security in our society,” he said then.
On January 25, protesters took to the streets. Cairo and other cities soon became battle zones between demonstrators and police who used gunfire, rubber bullets, water cannon and batons.
After several days of violence, when buildings were torched and cars wrecked, police were withdrawn and the army moved in to take control. Soldiers were met with cheers from the crowd.