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Egyptian Press Gasps at Images of Fallen Pharaoh Mubarak Egyptian Gazette, AFP Thursday, August 4, 2011 12:55:45 PM Egypt's press on Thursday captured the nation's incredulity at seeing Hosni Mubarak on trial for murder, hailing the fall of the "Pharaoh" as a triumph for the revolution that ended his 30-year rule.
Pictures of Mubarak lying on a stretcher and dressed in a white
prison suit blanketed the front pages of newspapers, six months
after the mere mention of his health could have landed an editor in
jail.
It was an epic downfall, with the once absolute ruler now a caged
invalid, a scene unthinkable before the January 25 revolution.
"The Pharaoh is in the cage," said the independent daily Al-Masry al-Youm, while the state-owned Al-Ahram weekly gasped at "Mubarak's unthinkable end."
"Mubarak in the cage, now the revolution has won," trumpeted the
state-owned daily Al-Akhbar, long known for publishing fawning
editorials and flattering images of Mubarak.
"Egypt's revolution has won," gloated the independent daily Al-Dustur,
whose former editor Ibrahim Eissa was sentenced to six months in
jail in 2008 for speculating on Mubarak's health. He was later
pardoned.
On Wednesday, Mubarak was flown to Cairo from the Red Sea resort of
Sharm el-Sheikh where he had been in custody in hospital being
treated for a heart condition.
He is accused of ordering the killing of protesters during the
January-February uprising that toppled his regime.
His lawyer Farid al-Deeb had claimed Mubarak suffers from cancer and
went into a coma last month, which the hospital treating him denied.
His sons Alaa and Gamal, former interior minister Habib al-Adly and
six ex-security chiefs were being tried in the same case.
Businessman Hussein Salem, a close associate of the Mubaraks, is
being tried in absentia.
For weeks, it seemed likely Mubarak would be tried in Sharm
el-Sheikh, if at all, amid contradictory statements surrounding his
health.
The hearing – with its dramatic images of an ailing Mubarak on a
hospital bed – was aired live on Egyptian television and gripped the
nation, and Cairo's usually bustling streets were abnormally quiet
during Wednesday's proceedings.
"Just one image of the ousted president, with his bed inside the
dock, has changed everything," read the editorial in Al-Masry al-Youm.
"The revolutionaries were reassured about the fact that the process
was real and not staged," it said.
But others warned the powerful images should not placate the protest
movement that has continued to push for reforms after Mubarak's
resignation on February 11.
There could be attempts to "silence the Egyptian people through
these images, and this is a real danger," said Eissa, now the editor
of the independent daily Al-Tahrir, named after the square that was
the epicentre of protests that brought Mubarak down.
Some however feel the country's ruling military council, headed by
Mubarak's long-time defence minister Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi,
could not possibly turn on one of their own.
A cartoon by political satirist Carlos Latuff depicts the trial as a
staged affair.
The drawing shows Mubarak on a hospital bed, with camera spotlights
shining on him and his lawyer sitting on a director's chair.
"Good, now play victim!," says the lawyer in the cartoon.
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