Egyptian President dismisses Prosecutor General![]() October 12, 2012 - 10:48 AMT PanARMENIAN.Net - Egyptian President Mohammed Mursi has removed Prosecutor General Abdel Maguid Mahmoud from his post, BBC News reported. He was appointed envoy to the Vatican, with Mursi's office giving no official reason for the switch. But Maguid later said he would stay in his post in defiance of Mr Mursi's order, according to state-run Mena news agency. The row comes a day after 24 supporters of ousted President Hosni Mubarak were acquitted of organizing attacks on protesters during last year's uprising. Hundreds of demonstrators rallied in the capital Cairo against the acquittals. They accused the judges of "complicity" with the former Egyptian leadership and said they wanted to "purify justice". The group on trial had been accused of sending men on camels and horses to break up a protest in Cairo in 2011. In the incident, later called the Battle of the Camels, Mubarak supporters charged protesters in Tahrir Square. It became one of the most notorious incidents of the uprising and left nearly a dozen people dead. Some senior members of the old regime were among those accused. They included Fathi Srur and Safwat al-Sherif, former speakers of Egypt's two houses of parliament. Prosecutors said Mr Sherif, who was also the secretary general of Mubarak's National Democratic Party (NPD), had "contacted MPs, members of the NDP and financiers of the party, inciting them to disperse the protests in Tahrir Square by force and violence". Mahmoud was appointed in July 2006. Partner news Amy Elliott, chief administrative officer of the Oklahoma medical examiner's office, said 51 were confirmed dead. An Islamist insurgency, once confined largely to the republic of Chechnya, has spread across the North Caucasus in recent years. Earlier, at least five Azerbaijan soldiers were killed and six seriously injured when their vehicle rammed into a tree and overturned. Among its provisions are bans on child marriage and the traditional practice of selling and buying women to settle disputes. Partner news |