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The release of Egypt's ex-president Hosni Mubarak approved on Monday ends "talk of the Arab Spring" uprising that toppled him in 2011 after 30 years in power, an analyst said. An Egyptian prosecutor approved a request by Mubarak's lawyer for his release after a top court acquitted him of involvement in the killing of protesters during the popular revolt.
Mubarak's expected release comes as many leaders of the 2011 protests that ousted him linger in jail but members of his former regime walk free. Six years on, critics say the abuses they fought under Mubarak have returned with President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, the former army chief who toppled Mubarak's Islamist successor after just a year in power. "Talk of the Arab Spring has completely stopped," said Mai Mogib, a politics professor at Cairo University.
But "discussing Mubarak and symbols of his era has become acceptable in the media and in the street", she said. Mubarak's lawyer said Monday the 88-year-old was free to go home after having spent most of his time since his arrest in 2011 detained at a military hospital in Cairo. "He can go home now when the doctors decide he is able to," Farid al-Deeb told AFP, adding that the ex-president is however banned from leaving the country pending an ongoing graft investigation.
Mubarak's sons have already been released from prison, and most of the charges brought against the ex-president's regime members have been dismissed. "He's in a better position than all other presidents who faced the Arab Spring" uprisings, Mogib said. Mubarak had been accused of inciting the deaths of protesters during the 18-day revolt, in which about 850 people were killed as police clashed with demonstrators. But Egypt's top appeals court on March 2 acquitted him of involvement in the killings.
Mubarak was sentenced to life in 2012 in the case, but an appeals court ordered a retrial which dismissed the charges two years later. His acquittal this month, which is final, has angered relatives of those killed in 2011. "Our son's blood was spilled for nothing," said Mostafa Morsi, whose son was shot dead aged 22 on January 28, 2011. "I wish Mohammed had lived to work, marry and have children," his father said. Several key activists in the 2011 uprising are now serving lengthy jail terms, and rights groups say hundreds of others have been forcibly disappeared.
The anti-Mubarak revolt ushered in instability that drove away tourists and investors, taking a heavy toll on the economy. In the street and on television talk shows, Egyptians now mainly discuss the faltering economy and rising prices instead of politics. "After six years of the so-called Arab Spring, people remember Mubarak's era with nostalgia", said Mahmoud Ibrahim, a former mid-level official at Mubarak's dissolved National Democratic Party. "The sentence simply says Mubarak is neither corrupt nor a killer," said the 37-year-old. Prosecutors had levelled various charges against Mubarak following his February 2011 resignation.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2017

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