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An Egyptian Court has sentenced Mubarak to life in prison after convicting him of involvement in the murder of protesters during last year’s uprisings
Authorities have disqualified presidential front-runners including Hosni Mubarak’s spy chief and a Muslim Brotherhood candidate from the election.
Hosni Mubarak’s lawyer has painted him as "a just man, not a tyrant", adding his accusers have no evidence to support their claims against him.
Egypt’s parliamentary elections have become hotly contested by rival Islamic groups all seeking to extend their early gains in the run-off vote.
Egyptians have voted in their first election since a revolt ousted Hosni Mubarak, amid fears the generals who replaced him would cling to power.
Egyptians desperate to stop cheats stitching up the country’s first free election in decades are lining up by the thousand, cameras at the ready.
Young activists have organised a vote for a civilian council to guard their revolution from Egypt’s rulers who they no longer trust.
Egypt’s Supreme Council of the Armed Forces has been accused of brutality sometimes worse than that of Hosni Mubarak after more deaths of protesters.
Egypt’s ousted president Hosni Mubarak, on trial for conspiring to kill protesters, was wheeled into a courtroom cage in a hospital bed on Wednesday.
Ousted Egyptian leader Hosni Mubarak will be held to account by the people he ruled for three decades in a trial starting on Wednesday.
The trial of former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak will be held at a police academy in Cairo with a maximum of 600 people allowed to attend.
Youth protesters vowed to remain in Tahrir Square until their demands are met, in escalating tension between demonstrators and the miltary council.
Protests erupted across much of the Arab world on the Muslim day of prayer, with demonstrators killed in Syria and Yemen.
Egyptians will vote on proposed constitutional changes on Saturday in the first election in decades in which they will not know the result in advance.
New evidence of spying and torture by an Egyptian security agency has piled pressure on military rulers to abolish a hated symbol of the Mubarak era.
Soldiers used force on Saturday to break up a protest demanding more political reform in Egypt, demonstrators said.
Egypt’s new military rulers said on Sunday they had dissolved Parliament and suspended the Constitution and would govern only for six months.
Egyptian soldiers shoved pro-democracy protesters aside to force a path for traffic to start flowing through central Cairo’s Tahrir Square on Sunday.
Egyptians woke to a new dawn on Saturday after 30 years of autocratic rule under Hosni Mubarak, full of hope after achieving unthinkable change.
Anti-government protesters said on Thursday they were more determined than ever to topple Egypt President Hosni Mubarak after Wednesday’s clashes.