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Egypt Court Acquits ex-PM, Mubarak Sons of Corruption

Egyptian courts acquitted Ahmed Shafiq, a former premier and presidential candidate, of corruption charges on Thursday, paving the way for his return more than a year after he fled abroad.

The courts also acquitted the two sons of ousted strongman Hosni Mubarak, whom he served under, Alaa and Gamal, but they still face other corruption trials.

Shafiq fled to the United Arab Emirates shortly after he narrowly lost a 2012 presidential election to now ousted Islamist Mohammed Morsi.

His acquittal underscored the sharp reversal of fortune for Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood movement since his overthrow by the army in July after a single turbulent year in power.

Shafiq has since founded a political party, and now that he is free to return, intends to build on it ahead of parliamentary elections scheduled for mid-2014, a spokesman told AFP.

"He plans to focus on his political party, to take charge," said spokesman Ahmed Sarhan.

Shafiq had been charged with corruption in connection with land sales involving Mubarak's sons, while he was a senior aviation official in Mubarak's government.

His supporters said the charges, brought under Morsi following the deeply divisive contest for Egypt's first democratic presidential election, were blatantly political.

Mubarak's sons still face separate corruption trials, including one with their father, who is also accused of involvement in the killings of protesters during the uprising that forced him from power in February 2011.

Morsi himself is now on trial, for allegedly inciting the killing of opposition activists.

He is also to stand trial for allegedly colluding with Palestinian and Lebanese militant groups to conduct a "terrorist" campaign, prosecutors say.

The military-installed government plans parliamentary and presidential elections by autumn 2014, amid widespread speculation that armed forces chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi will compete and win.

Sisi has not confirmed his candidacy but, if he stands, former military officers such as Shafiq are expected to stand aside.

Shafiq has previously said that he would consider standing in the election only if Sisi did not.

Sisi, now a deputy premier and defense minister in the government he installed, is easily the most popular leader in the country.

He overthrew Morsi, who had named him defense minister, following days of mass protests demanding the Islamist's resignation.

Morsi's Brotherhood had won every election after Mubarak's overthrow but is expected to fare badly in next year's polls because of a popular backlash, if it does not boycott them.

A police crackdown has killed more than 1,000 people, mostly Islamists, in street clashes and imprisoned thousands more, including the Brotherhood's top leadership.

The Islamists continue near-daily protests demanding Morsi's reinstatement.

Source: Agence France Presse


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