Hosni Mubarak’s party hub bites the dust

NDP headquarters being razed along with adjacent tower that once housed offices of state-run organisations

Last updated:
1 MIN READ
1.1527564-3541039572
AP
AP

Cairo: Egypt on Sunday began tearing down the headquarters of the once-dominant party of ex-president Hosni Mubarak that was torched during the 2011 uprising that toppled him.

Demolition workers, using cranes and bulldozers, began razing the four-storey headquarters of Mubarak’s National Democratic Party (NDP) located on the Nile in central Cairo.

An adjacent 14-storey tower that once housed offices of state-run organisations was also being dismantled.

In early 2011, angry protesters demanding the ouster of Mubarak had ransacked and set fire to the NDP buildings — seen as symbols of his autocratic rule.

Last month the government approved plans to demolish the buildings.

Both buildings are located close to the famed building of the Egyptian Museum of Antiquities near Cairo’s iconic Tahrir Square — epicentre of the anti-Mubarak revolt.

Mubarak’s NDP party was ordered officially dissolved in 2011 but a court in July lifted a ban on former party members contesting elections.

A court in November dropped murder charges against Mubarak, 87, in connection with the deaths of some 800 protesters during the uprising. He was however sentenced to three years in prison in a separate case on corruption charges along with his two sons, Ala’a and Jamal.

epa02690329 (FILE) A file picture dated 07 Febuary 2011 shows an Egyptian looking to the damaged building of the ruling National Democratic Party (NDP) in Cairo, Egypt. Egypt's Supreme Administrative Court ordered on 16 April the political party of former Egyptian president Hosny Mubarak to be dissolved, state television reported. The formerly ruling National Democratic Party (NDP) recently named outspoken opposition figure Talaat Sadat, a nephew of the assassinated former president Anwar Sadat, as its head, replacing Mubarak. Sadat called on leaders of the revolutionary protest movements which led to Mubarak's resignation in February to join the new party, which is renaming itself 'The New National Party'. EPA/KHALED EL FIQI
epa03013073 A view of the building of National Democratic Party (NDP) witch was burned during the January uprising, in Cairo, Egypt, 23 November 2011. An Egyptian court has ordered on 11 November members of former president Hosni Mubarak's now-disbanded party to be barred from running in the November parliamentary elections on 11 November 2011. Since Mubarak's ouster, the opposition have pressed the country's military rulers to bar members of the former governing NDP from contesting the vote and practising politics. In October, several political parties, comprising Mubarak loyalists, held a series of rallies across Egypt, to warn against excluding them from politics. EPA/ANDRE PAIN

Sign up for the Daily Briefing

Get the latest news and updates straight to your inbox