Egypt ex-interior minister ‘to go on trial March 5’

Egypt’s once widely feared interior minister Habib al-Adly is to appear before a criminal court on March 5 accused of money laundering, judicial sources told AFP on Sunday.

Adly would be the first of toppled president Hosni Mubarak’s regime to face trial.

He was arrested on February 17, along with tourism minister Zoheir Garranah and steel tycoon Ahmed Ezz, a senior member of Mubarak’s National Democratic Party.

Nationwide protests that erupted on January 25 led to the overthrow of Mubarak, who had ruled Egypt for 30 years under emergency law.

The protests that lasted 18 days and saw bloody clashes between protesters and Adly’s security forces, left at least 384 people dead and over 6,000 injured while scores were detained.

Upon his resignation, Mubarak handed power to a military council that pledged to pave the way for a free democratic system in the Arab world’s most populous nation and vowed to prosecute all those found guilty of abuses during the protests.

Pro-democracy campaigners have repeatedly called for Adly to be held accountable for violence used against protesters, and for the use of force and torture by his security apparatus during his time as minister.

Egypt’s controversial emergency law which gives police extended powers of arrest, suspends constitutional rights and curbs non-governmental political activity, has been extended regularly years since 1981.

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