Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood slams Mubarak testimony

Ex-president claims Egypt’s 2011 popular uprising was fomented by infiltrators from Gaza Strip

Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood slams Mubarak testimony

Egypt's banned Muslim Brotherhood group has vociferously denied the veracity of testimony given by former president Hosni Mubarak regarding Egypt’s popular uprising in 2011 that ended the latter’s 30-year rule.

“What happened at the trial [i.e., Mubarak’s testimony] was an attempt to discredit and tarnish the uprising’s image,” Brotherhood spokesman Talaat Fahmi told a foreign-based Egyptian television channel late Wednesday.

Earlier the same day, Mubarak had appeared in court to testify at the retrial of his successor, Mohamed Morsi, who faces charges of participating in a mass jailbreak in 2011.

Fahmi asked: “If [Mubarak] believed the January revolution was a [foreign] conspiracy, why did he accept to step down and leave the country when he still had presidential authority?”

He went on: “How can 800 people breach Egypt’s 100-kilometer border [with Gaza], pass 10 security checkpoints, cross the Suez Canal, and finally arrive at Tahrir Square [the epicenter of the 2011 uprising], as Mubarak claims, without anyone trying to stop them?”

Wednesday’s court session was the first time for Mubarak and Morsi to see one another since the former relinquished power in 2011 following 18 days of countrywide demonstrations. 

Morsi was elected president in 2012, one year after Mubarak stepped down. 

After a single year in power, however, Morsi was himself ousted in a military coup and slapped with a host of criminal charges, which he and his supporters insist are politically motivated. 

Following Morsi’s ouster in mid-2013, the Egyptian authorities launched a relentless crackdown on political dissent, killing or imprisoning thousands of Morsi’s supporters and members of his now-banned Muslim Brotherhood.