Daughter sues over claim Egypt's Sadat killed Nasser

22 Sep, 2010

The daughter of late Egyptian president Anwar Sadat is suing his former aide over claims the leader poisoned his predecessor Gamal Abdel Nasser, a judicial source told AFP on Tuesday. Roqaya al-Sadat has filed a complaint to the public prosecutor accusing Mohammed Hassanein Heikal, a prominent journalist who was Sadat's aide and adviser, of libel, the source said.
In a programme on pan-Arab satellite channel Al-Jazeera, Heikal said Nasser died three days after Sadat personally prepared a cup of coffee for him, implying the beverage was poisoned. "My father didn't like coffee and didn't know how to prepare coffee," Roqaya said in the complaint to the public prosecutor, the judicial source said. Nationalist leader Nasser suffered a heart attack and died in office on September 28, 1970. Sadat, who was his deputy at the time, then took over as president. He was gunned down in 1981 by Islamist militants opposed to a peace deal he agreed with Israel.

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