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Habib el Adly

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President
  
Hosni Mubarak

Rank
  
Major General

Party
  
National Democratic Party

Preceded by
  
Hassan Al Alfi

Name
  
Habib el-Adly

Succeeded by
  
Mahmoud Wagdy


Allegiance
  
Egypt

Role
  
Egyptian Politician

Years of service
  
1959-1997

Spouse
  
Elham Salem

Children
  
Sherif el-Adly

Habib el-Adly Egypt39s trial by fire Al Jazeera English


Full Name
  
Mohammad Habib el-Adly

Born
  
1938 (age 76–77) Sharqiya Governorate, Egypt

Political party
  
National Democratic Party

Similar People
  
Ahmed Ezz, Hosni Mubarak, Gamal Mubarak, Alaa Mubarak, Hussein Salem

Service/branch
  
Ministry of Interior

Habib bey el adly


Habib Ibrahim El-Adly (Arabic: حبيب إبراهيم العادلي‎‎, [ħæˈbiːb ebɾɑˈhiːm elˈʕædli]; born 1938) is a former Egyptian politician. He served as interior minister of Egypt from November 1997 to January 2011. He was the longest serving interior minister under President Hosni Mubarak.

Contents

Habib el-Adly Egypt39s former interior minister sentenced Al Jazeera

Following the 2011 Egyptian revolution, Adly was convicted of corruption and conspiring to kill protestors and was sentenced to life in prison. This conviction was later dropped.

Habib el-Adly Mubarakera interior minister Habib ElAdly referred to

He was later sentenced to 7 years. He fled into hiding on 11 May 2017.

Habib el-Adly Egypt Arrests Former Interior Minister Three Others

Egypt s former interior minister habib el adly on trial


Early life and education

Habib el-Adly httpspbstwimgcomprofileimages1229592092ha

El-Adly was born in 1938. He graduated from the police academy in 1959.

Career

Habib el-Adly Habib elAdly Sevenyear jail sentence for corruption Egypt News

In 1965, Adly joined the State Security Investigations Service. After working at various investigation departments, he was employed at the foreign ministry from 1982 to 1984. He then investigated state security matters, and became assistant interior minister in 1993. He replaced General Hassan Al Alfi as interior minister following the November 1997 Luxor massacre. Adly was one of the most significant figures who supported Mubarak during his reign.

Adly served as interior minister in two different cabinets. He was replaced by Mahmoud Wagdy on 31 January 2011 as part of a cabinet reshuffle aimed at appeasing the mass protests during 2011 Egyptian revolution.

Post-revolution

During the uprising, the Egyptian attorney general announced Adly had been given a travel ban. Following Mubarak's resignation, Adly and two other former ministers were arrested on corruption charges. His assets were ordered frozen by a court order. Adly is estimated to have amassed a fortune of 1.2 billion US dollars. He pleaded not guilty to corruption charges on 5 March 2011, answering questions by the judge on whether he had illegally profited from his government position or laundered money by saying "that did not happen." On 5 May 2011, Adly was found guilty of fraud and money laundering and sentenced to 12 years in prison. In June 2012, Adly, along with deposed president Hosni Mubarak, was found guilty of conspiring to kill protestors during the uprising and was sentenced to life in prison in May 2012. In March 2013, the conviction was overturned by the Court of Cassation and a retrial was requested.

On retrial, el Adly was acquitted on all charges and was released from detention in March, 2015.

References

Habib el-Adly Wikipedia