Audio By Carbonatix
The trial of former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak has resumed in Cairo amid renewed uproar between defence and prosecution lawyers.
Some of the lawyers are reported to have withdrawn from the courtroom, saying it was too chaotic.
Security was tightened after Monday's session descended into scuffles both inside and outside the Cairo courtroom.
Mr Mubarak, 83, faces charges of ordering the shooting of protesters during the uprising that ousted him.
'Uncivilised' proceedings
The fourth session of the trial opened with uproar in court, reports the BBC's Bethany Bell from Cairo.
Anti-Mubarak protesters chanted "revenge, revenge," and called for the leader of Egypt's ruling military council, Field Marshal Tantawi, to give evidence in court.
The judge told them that their conduct was uncivilised.
Mr Mubarak was wheeled into court on a stretcher and joined his sons in the defendant's cage.
The court is hearing evidence from senior police officers who were on duty during the uprisings in Egypt earlier this year.
One officer was arrested for changing his evidence, a source inside the courtroom has told the BBC. The officer had originally told prosecution lawyers that he was given orders to use live ammunition against protesters, but changed his testimony in court.
At the last hearing on Monday, none of the witnesses who testified implicated Mr Mubarak in the deaths of protesters during the revolution against his three-decade autocratic rule.
Outside the courtroom, meanwhile, there have been small protests, despite the heightened security.
"We are not tired... there is no alternative to the revolution," chanted the protesters in Arabic.
Some 850 people were killed during the 18-day uprising in Cairo's Tahrir Square in January and February.
The victims' families want to know what orders Mr Mubarak gave to his officials as police tried to stop the mass protests that resulted in the president's resignation on 11 February.
The trial of Mr Mubarak and his sons Gamal and Alaa has been merged with that of former Interior Minister Habib al-Adly, who is also accused of ordering the killing of protesters.
All the defendants deny the charges.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Endangered antelopes flown to Kenya from Czech zoo in ‘historic homecoming’
2 minutes -
Five takeaways from the King’s historic address to Congress
6 minutes -
Let’s join ‘National Streetism Awareness’ to raise awareness about plight of street children – Salome Atiglah
6 minutes -
Prada launches Indian-made sandals after cultural appropriation backlash
7 minutes -
Outrage after Indian man carries his sister’s skeleton to a bank to prove her death
10 minutes -
GOIL launches 2026 HSSEQ Week with Focus on Psychosocial Well-being
20 minutes -
NPRA’s digital revolution: How technology is reshaping Ghana’s pension sector
28 minutes -
CID clears Sesi-Edem, Council of State member in $14.3m gold deal probe
29 minutes -
Credit to corporate institutions tighten in first two months of 2026
40 minutes -
Two dead after small plane crashes into Australia airport hangar
41 minutes -
Banks wrote-off GH¢394.8m as bad debt in February 2026
45 minutes -
‘Dumsor running in shifts, not 24-hour economy’ — NPP’s Dr Ekua Amoakoh slams gov’t over power outages
49 minutes -
AIPS Awards 2025: JoySports’ Mubarak Haruna takes second and fifth spots in continental ranking
50 minutes -
Green finance: Legal foundations, global realities, and Ghana’s regulatory pathway
52 minutes -
Gov’t clears $29m Suame road debt, boosts project with GH₵3bn funding
54 minutes