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The once burly autocrat with the trademark sunglasses, who became frail after multiple surgeries towards the end of his life, spent years in custody for his role in the deaths of protesters but was freed in 2017 after the convictions were overturned.
His son Alaa Mubarak wrote on Twitter: “This morning my father, president Mubarak, passed away”.
His death was confirmed by the presidency and on state television.
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A military funeral was planned for Wednesday, to be followed by three days of mourning, said the office of President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi.
On Tuesday, at the cemetery in eastern Cairo where Mubarak will be buried, AFP reporters saw several military vehicles parked next to the family grave and plainclothes policemen patrolling the area.
Mubarak had long battled illness and was recently admitted to a Cairo military hospital’s intensive care unit, as media speculated on whether he suffered cancer, heart troubles or respiratory ailments.
Tributes poured in from leaders in the Middle East, where Mubarak’s Egypt, a key ally of the United States, had at times served as a mediator, especially in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu praised Mubarak’s commitment to “peace and security” when he ruled Egypt, the first Arab state to make peace with Israel and establish full diplomatic relations.
Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas said he mourned Mubarak’s death “with great sorrow” and hailed his support of the Palestinian cause.
President Sisi’s office offered condolences and lauded Mubarak as one of the “heroes of the October 1973 war against Israel”.
The long-time president started off as a military pilot and was commander of the air force in the 1973 war with Israel.
He became vice president in 1975 before taking power in 1981, following the assassination of former president Anwar al-Sadat by Islamist militants.
Mubarak was sitting near Sadat, but survived, going on to dodge bullets during several more attempts on his life, including one by Islamist militants in 1995 in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa.
He remained head of state for three decades but was overthrown in 2011 after three weeks of mass protests that started on January 25.
His ouster came amid mounting popular anger triggered partly by rampant police brutality and by 2010 parliamentary elections which were widely slammed as rigged.
Some reactions to his death online, in particular from staunch anti-Mubarak activists, recalled the anger with his rule that stoked the uprising.
“He lived as a criminal and a tyrant and died a criminal and a thief,” tweeted Rasha Azab, a prominent leftist writer who was at the forefront of the revolution.
Mubarak faced multiple charges after his overthrow, including over the deaths of protesters in 2011 and for corruption.
But in the years since, many Egyptians’ aversion to Mubarak has gradually given way to indifference mixed with nostalgia, and many now remember his rule as a bygone period of stability.