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			 Mubarak, 86, was sentenced to three years in prison last May for 
			diverting public funds earmarked to renovate presidential palaces 
			and using the money to upgrade family properties. His two sons were 
			given four-year jail terms in the same case. 
 Suffering from ill health, he has been serving his sentence in a 
			military hospital in the upscale Maadi district of Cairo.
 
 Mubarak remains detained for now, but judicial sources say he could 
			soon walk free as no convictions remain against him after the high 
			court ordered a retrial in the embezzlement case.
 
 His release, while thousands of his political opponents languish in 
			jail, would be a further blow to activists who had hoped his 
			downfall in the 2011 Arab Spring marked the dawn of a new era of 
			political freedom in Egypt.
 
 Tuesday's verdict follows a court decision in November to drop 
			charges against Mubarak of conspiring to kill protesters in the 
			uprising that ended his 30-year rule.
 
 
			
			 
			That ruling led to protests in which at least two people were 
			killed.
 
 "After the release of police officers charged with killing 
			demonstrators and of Mubarak aides, and his acquittal over the 
			killing of protesters, this is not shocking news," said Khaled 
			Dawoud, spokesman for the opposition Dostour Party, 10 of whose 
			members are behind bars for taking part in peaceful protests.
 
 "But I don't think Mubarak is the issue any more. The Egyptian 
			people gave their verdict against him four years ago."
 
 CRACKDOWN ON ISLAMISTS
 
 Many Egyptians who lived through Mubarak's rule view it as a period 
			of autocracy and crony capitalism.
 
 His overthrow led to Egypt's first free election. But the Islamist 
			victor, Mohamed Mursi, was ousted in 2013 by then-army chief Abdel 
			Fattah al-Sisi, following protests against his rule.
 
 Sisi, who went on to win a presidential election last May, launched 
			a crackdown on Mursi and his Muslim Brotherhood. Security forces 
			have rounded up thousands of Brotherhood supporters and courts have 
			sentenced hundreds to death in mass trials that have drawn 
			international criticism.
 
 Liberal activists have also found themselves on the wrong side of 
			Egypt's new rulers, facing jail for breaking a law that curtails the 
			freedom to protest.
 
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			By contrast, Mubarak-era figures are slowly being cleared of charges 
			and a series of laws curbing political freedoms have raised fears 
			among activists that the rights won during 18 days of protest in 
			Cairo's Tahrir Square, the symbolic heart of the revolution, are 
			being eroded.
 The Court of Cassation, which ordered the retrial, did not say if 
			Mubarak should be freed on bail in the meantime.
 
 Mubarak also faces retrial for a third and final time over charges 
			of involvement in the death of demonstrators in 2011.
 
 The official MENA news agency quoted an interior ministry source as 
			saying Mubarak and his sons would only be released on orders from 
			the public prosecution or the court that retries them.
 
 A source in the public prosecutor's office said it was up to the 
			courts that retry Mubarak whether to release him on bail or to keep 
			him in pretrial detention pending a verdict, suggesting he will 
			remain incarcerated for the time being.
 
 But his lawyer, Fareed el-Deeb, told reporters after Tuesday's 
			hearing that Mubarak had served the maximum permitted time in 
			pretrial detention and should be freed.
 
 Before his conviction in the presidential palaces embezzlement cases 
			in May, Mubarak had been freed on that basis.
 
 (Writing by Lin Noueihed; Editing by Janet Lawrence and Mark 
			Trevelyan)
 
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