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Habib el-Adly, Egypt's Ex-Interior Minister, Sentenced To 12 Years In Prison

Habib Eladly Prison

HAMZA HENDAWI   05/ 5/11 12:05 PM ET   AP

CAIRO — Former President Hosni Mubarak's top security official, who led a much-feared security apparatus blamed for widespread rights abuses, was convicted Thursday of corruption and money laundering and sentenced to 12 years in prison.

The conviction of former Interior Minister Habib el-Adly marked the start of a broad reckoning with the legacy of Mubarak's three-decade authoritarian rule, which was brought to an end on Feb. 11 by a popular uprising.

El-Adly was the first of about two dozen Mubarak-era Cabinet ministers and regime-linked businessmen to be found guilty. The others in custody include a former prime minister, the speakers of parliament's two chambers and Mubarak's two sons, all suspected of corruption.

El-Adly said nothing after hearing the verdict but looked visibly distraught as he was led away by police guards to an armored truck that took him to prison. Several hundred protesters outside the courthouse shouted insults at him as he made his way to the truck, with some demanding that he be executed.

El-Adly served as Mubarak's interior minister for 13 years, a time during which his 500,000-strong security forces were blamed for some of the worst human rights violations Egypt had seen in decades. Anger over police brutality, particularly by members of the notorious state security agency, was a main motive for the uprising. That agency has since been dismantled.

The court also fined el-Adly 15 million Egyptian pounds, or about $2.5 million, and ordered his assets confiscated.

He is facing allegations in a separate case that he had ordered the deadly use of live ammunition against unarmed protesters during the 18-day uprising that toppled Mubarak. About 850 people were killed in the Jan. 25-Feb. 11 uprising, which was led by youth groups.

If convicted on that charge, el-Adly could face the death penalty.

Mubarak himself and one of his sons, one-time heir apparent Gamal, face the same allegations in the killings of protesters.

El-Adly and former Prime Minister Ahmed Nazif also face corruption charges related to awarding a contract for the supply of new car license plates without going through legal procedures.

El-Adly is also blamed for the security vacuum created when police vanished from the streets of Cairo and other cities across the country on Jan. 28 after several days of deadly clashes with protesters. The circumstances of their disappearance have not been fully explained to this day, but the effects of the vacuum it created are still felt.

Armed mobs of criminals and relatives have attempted over the last two days to free suspects from holding cells at four police stations, three of them in Cairo, a bustling city of some 18 million people.

All but one of the four attempts succeeded. In one jailbreak, the mob was able to free nearly 90 detainees from the Sahel police station in northern Cairo on Tuesday. Police have so far re-arrested 28 of the escaped suspects.

Also, authorities are continuing to hunt for thousands of inmates who broke out from several Egyptian jails during the uprising and soon after Mubarak's ouster.

On Tuesday, several hundred people ransacked a Cairo courtroom after a judge ordered the release without bail of 13 police officers charged with killing and wounding protesters during the uprising. The crowd, estimated at about 500 and made up of the victims' relatives and friends, also attempted to assail the judge.

In the northern Sinai town of el-Arish on Thursday, an army force came under attack when they arrived at a seaside compound to investigate a report of gunmen hiding in the area. One soldier was killed and an officer was wounded, a security official and a hospital doctor said, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.

___

Associated Press writer Ashraf Sweilam contributed to this report from el-Arish, Egypt.

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CAIRO — Former President Hosni Mubarak's top security official, who led a much-feared security apparatus blamed for widespread rights abuses, was convicted Thursday of corruption and money laund...
CAIRO — Former President Hosni Mubarak's top security official, who led a much-feared security apparatus blamed for widespread rights abuses, was convicted Thursday of corruption and money laund...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JISantiago
08:04 PM on 05/08/2011
Muslim Brotherhood is a terror group that is trying to turn Egypt's clock to the stone age.

If this group is accepted as a legitimate political force, it would defeat the people's revolution's aim of establishing a secular state in Egypt.

Perhaps, Mubarak was right in proscribing this fundamentalist group.
12:59 PM on 05/06/2011
the more interesting story out of Egypt is how the Muslimm Brotherhood IS putting up candidates for political office just as they earlier said they would NOT.

of course anyone w/ half a brain knew they were lying
02:15 PM on 05/06/2011
I think they said they will not put candidates to run for president, and that they will contest only half the seats in parliament. I don't believe they ever said anything about not running for office altogether.
Despite the monumental philosophical objections I have against the Brotherhood, I have to concede they have a right to run for office just like anybody else.
jkb5371
what is this??
09:43 AM on 05/06/2011
That hair alone should've gotten him at least 20...
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
08:42 AM on 05/06/2011
Good. Now will the Egyptians please visit the US and help us?
Intelligentia
Anti-Racist
07:21 AM on 05/06/2011
Excellent.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
silverspirit2011
10:49 PM on 05/05/2011
How come it takes western agencies years to prosecute finance mismanagement, with a trial that usually lasts months, and 2 months for the Egyptians, with a one week trail?

Something to think about.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nicholas B
09:33 PM on 05/05/2011
Much more interesting will be the next criminal case brought against him, the murder charges where he will face the death penalty if convicted.

All these former regime figures probably wished they'd fled to Saudi, since they don't seem to honor Interpol requests for fugitives there.
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fairwayhill
1948 Palestine belongs to the Palestinians
07:57 PM on 05/05/2011
He should get the de@th penalty for his US supported crimes against the people of Egypt.
01:00 PM on 05/06/2011
maybe you'd like to give the death penalty to ALL the US presidents that once supported this regime?
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BoudiccaBlanc
~Yes, my micro-bio is emply! ~
06:52 PM on 05/05/2011
Of course! The current group of thugs need to exorcise all the "demons" of the prior regime!

That way, "the people" won't see what their new masters are doing behind the curtain.

(It appears to be "business as usual" in Egypt. The people who will pay the price will be the children and the minorities. There's nothing new under the sun. )
01:04 AM on 05/06/2011
And how did you arrive at these conclusions exactly?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
The ORF in Largo
Louder than a fart a hurricane
06:40 PM on 05/05/2011
Sometimes bad things DO happen to bad people.Still waiting for it to happen in America
where we have plenty of candidates for prison.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WminPhoenix
Term Limits For All Politicians
06:33 PM on 05/05/2011
Wow, three months from being cuffed to being stuffed.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
snowmanjny
Real Americans believe in an educated opinion.
05:29 PM on 05/05/2011
"No dictator, no invader, can hold an imprisoned population by force of arms forever."
J. Michael Straczynski
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Amryxx
politeness rules, but with sharpened edges
04:56 PM on 05/05/2011
Money laundering and corruption?

What about the actual HR violations?
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theuniversalcollective
from the ether that is net
06:15 PM on 05/05/2011
Capone was put away for tax evasion, they get you with what they can get you with, the other stuff, well .... when you put those people on the stand, you give away the entire store
01:06 AM on 05/06/2011
Amryxx, these are the first of a series of charges that he will stand trial for, including ordering the killing of protesters, torture, etc. By the end of the process he may get the death penalty or worse.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nicholas B
08:37 PM on 05/06/2011
Since they U.S. also has the death penalty - being one of the few such in the entire western world - and few HPers criticizing Egypt seem to have any problem-o with that at home, then maybe people in glass houses should not throw stones? I seem to recall quite a few people got the death penalty at Nuremberg, and same people would have no problem-o with that call either. In other words, 800 people and their families deserve justice in Egypt, in my opinion at least.