Egypt orders Suzanne Mubarak held
Ex-first lady reportedly passes out on hearing the news
Topics: Egyptian Protests, News
FILE - In this Feb. 19, 2003 file photo, Suzanne Mubarak, wife of Egypt's President Hosni Mubarak, smiles at the Free University Berlin. Egyptian authorities have ordered the detention of Suzanne Mubarak, wife of deposed President Hosni Mubarak, the government-run MENA news service says. The move on Friday May 13, 2011 comes a day after the government reported that Mubarak and his wife were questioned over suspicions they illegally amassed vast wealth. (AP Photo/Franka Bruns, File)(Credit: Associated Press)Egyptian authorities on Friday ordered ex-first lady Suzanne Mubarak detained over allegations she took advantage of her husband’s position to enrich herself.
A doctor said she passed out on hearing the news, and state-run Egyptian television later reported that she had been put in the intensive care unit at the hospital in this Red Sea resort community.
The detention order came after Mrs. Mubarak, 70, was questioned Thursday for the first time since corruption allegations against her surfaced following her husband Hosni Mubarak’s ouster from the presidency in February. A security official said Mrs. Mubarak will remain in the hospital for the time being but was expected to be moved to a women’s prison in Cairo.
Once a low-key first lady known for her focus on women and children rights, Mrs. Mubarak had in the last decade become known as a powerful mover in Egyptian politics.
She was believed to be a strong backer of her son Gamal’s efforts to succeed his father as well as another son Alaa’s business activities. She was known to have a say in the promotion of senior officials, and liked to be called “Hanem,” or “Madam,” as institutions and schools carrying her name mushroomed in recent years.
Mrs. Mubarak’s detention order came as thousands of Egyptians returned to Cairo’s Tahrir square, the epicenter of the 18-day uprising that led to her husband’s ouster.
The protesters were rallying in solidarity with Palestinians and denounced recent Muslim-Christian violence that killed 15 Egyptians. Many accuse former regime loyalists of fanning sectarian tension. They also warned of a new sit-in at the square, criticizing the current military rulers for being too slow in uprooting old regime figures, changing laws and upholding promised democratic reforms.
Mrs. Mubarak was ordered detained pending investigation into charges that she and her husband amassed vast wealth, the state news agency MENA reported. It said she was asked about 20 million Egyptian pounds ($3.3 million) held in her name in one of the Cairo banks as well as a number of luxury villas.
Mrs. Mubarak was interrogated at the hospital in Sharm el-Sheikh where her 83-year old husband, who also suffers from heart problems, has been held. Her husband has been questioned several times.
When she was told Friday that she would be detained for 15 days for further questioning, she fainted, said the hospital’s director, Dr. Mohammed Fatahallah. Doctors were treating her, Fatahallah said, adding that she had appeared to be in fine health while attending her husband.




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