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Have you seen the history of the gucci shoes in the store
07-21-11

 

   Have you seen the history of the gucci shoes in the store

 

 

 

 

gucci outlet Last month, Mr. Mubarak's lawyer, Farid el-Deeb, said that in addition, the former president had cancer. But like the coma claims on Sunday, those reports were quickly countered by officials in the Sharm el Sheik hospital and the Health Ministry, who said that Mr. Mubarak had only a heart condition and depression. On Sunday, a doctor at the hospital insisted that Mr. Mubarak was in stable condition after a brief spell of dizziness. Mr. Deeb could not be reached Sunday night, but staff members in his office said he stood by his statement about the coma despite the official denials. Mr. Deeb first made the claim to Al Jazeera, saying that he had heard the report from Mr. Mubarak's wife, Suzanne, and that he was rushing to Sharm el Sheik.

Word of Mr. Deeb's announcement raced through the crowd at Tahrir Square, where activists denounced the assertion as "a trick by his defense team," in the words of Mohamed Adel, a member of the so-called April 6 Youth Movement, which helped set off the revolution. Another activist, Mona Seif, said by telephone from Tahrir Square, "Until I see him being prosecuted, I don't care about his news." The health reports keeping the former president out of jail have become a lightning rod for public frustration with the pace of retribution for the corruption of the Mubarak government, which many here blame for Egypts continued poverty. "Egypt is one of the richest countries in the world, but Mubarak and his friends were thieves, and they stole the  gucci shoes country," said Mohamed Haroum, a 17-year-old demonstrating in the square. "Every Egyptian wants to see Mubarak on trial in court like a regular citizen, not above us any longer."

Attention on the case ahead of his trial, set for Aug. 3, has been stirred by two privately owned Egyptian newspapers that have published leaked transcripts of Mr. Mubarak's interrogation.

In those accounts, Mr. Mubarak denied responsibility for corruption or other crimes, but he appeared to shrug off the death of more than 800 people during the 18-day uprising against him. "Our people and our security are like that," he said.

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