CAIRO — Hosni Mubarak’s health entered a “dangerous” phase on Wednesday, and doctors had to administer oxygen five times to help the deposed Egyptian leader breathe, according to security officials at his prison.
Mubarak’s health crisis came days after he was sentenced to life in prison for failing to stop the killing of protesters in the uprising that unseated him last year.
The officials at Torah prison south of Cairo said Mubarak, 84, was suffering from shock and high blood pressure as well as breathing problems. Specialists were called in to examine him, and a transfer to a military hospital was being considered, said the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to reporters.
It was not immediately possible to independently verify the gravity of Mubarak’s condition.
Mubarak did not want to go to Torah after he was sentenced on Saturday, pleading with his escort to take him back to the military hospital east of Cairo where he had stayed in a suite since his trial began in August. He was held in a hospital in his favorite Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh from the time of his arrest in April last year until August.
Mubarak was sentenced to life on Saturday, but he and his two sons — one-time heir apparent Gamal and wealthy businessman Alaa — were acquitted of corruption charges. The sons are also being held in Torah, awaiting a separate trial on charges of insider trading.
The officials said prison authorities were allowing Gamal to be by his father’s side. Alaa also applied for permission, but it has not yet been granted, the officials said.
Though Mubarak’s authoritarian regime was widely unpopular by the time of his overthrow last year, conditions in Egypt have deteriorated since then, with a wave of deadly protests, a battered economy and seemingly endless strikes.
Some evidence of displeasure over conditions could be seen in the second-place finish by Mubarak’s last prime minister, Ahmed Shafiq, in the first round of presidential elections last month, ahead of more liberal candidates.
Shafiq is facing Muslim Brotherhood candidate Mohammed Morsi in a runoff election June 16-17, but it could still be called off.
A spokesman for Egypt’s highest court said it would look into whether a “political exclusion” law is constitutional on June 14, two days before the runoff. The law bans senior officials who served in Mubarak’s regime starting in 2001 from running for office. It applies to prime ministers, vice presidents and senior members of Mubarak’s now-dissolved ruling party.
If upheld, it could mean that Shafiq could not run — possibly forcing cancellation of the runoff and a repeat of the first round.
Quoted by Egypt’s official news agency, the spokesman, Maher Sami, did not say whether the Supreme Constitutional Court will issue its verdict on the same day. Sami, however, said the court’s experts have prepared their report on the law, suggesting that a June 14 ruling is likely.
“The court is responsive to public issues, and that is why it is rapidly working to settle the case, but it is difficult to tell now whether a verdict will be announced on June 14,” Sami told The Associated Press in a brief telephone interview.
Also to be considered by the court on June 14, according to Sami, is a finding by a lower tribunal that ruled against the law that regulated recent parliamentary elections.
If the decision is upheld by the higher court, the elections would be declared illegal, and the Islamist-dominated parliament would be dissolved.
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