The decision appeared designed to ease some of the criticism over the
court ruling and to ensure that Mubarak appears in court next week for a
separate trial, Reuters reported.
His wife, Suzanne, has been
living in Cairo and keeping a low profile, occasionally visiting Mubarak
and their two sons in prison.
The court ruling came after Mubarak was cleared of one of his corruption cases.
However,
he is currently awaiting a retrial over the death of protesters seeking
his overthrow in 2011, which could put him back behind bars. He also
faces investigations into at least two other corruption cases.
Egypt's
youth campaign group, Tamarod, said Mubarak's release was a threat to
national security. "We will not remain silent about freedom for any
killer of the Egyptian people," it said in a statement issued before his
release.
Mubarak is the second deposed ruler of Egypt to be
behind bars, along with the Brotherhood's Morsi, who was democratically
elected in 2012 following the collapse of Mubarak's regime, only to be
ousted by the military on July 3.
The 85-year-old Mubarak may have
no political future, but his release could rile already strained
emotions and raise questions about whether the popular uprising that
ended his 30-year rule has given way to a new form of jackboot
government.
Since his ouster, Morsi has been held incommunicado at an undisclosed
location. Several top leaders and other figures of the Muslim
Brotherhood, the Islamist group from which Morsi hails, have been
arrested and charged.
The clampdown appears to have weakened the Arab world's oldest and arguably most influential Islamist group.
Brotherhood supporters have called on Egyptians to hold "Friday of Martyrs" marches against the military takeover.
A
grouping calling itself The National Coalition to Support Legitimacy,
which has been demanding Morsi's reinstatement, told The Associated
Press in a statement: "We will remain steadfast on the road to defeating
the military coup."
*NBC News' Ian Johnston, Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
*Photo by EPA
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