Abdul Karim Salim - Cairo

A report issued by the Egyptian Attorney General on the involvement of the United Arab Emirates in the financing of "subversive gangs" under President Mohamed Morsi to create chaos, its relationship with the opposition Salvation Front and an aide to the Minister of Interior Hisham Qandil's government.

On Wednesday, the court presented an important and dangerous measure during a session of the isolated president's trial in the case of a journalist known as the "Prison Break" during the January 2011 revolution.

Al-Herz held a report to the Attorney-General entitled "Extremely confidential and criminalized after reading it ... presented to the Attorney General") and an editor on 19 February 2013.

The report presented "official" reports from the "Security Services" very dangerous in figures (609 for 2013 administrative palace Nile, and 610 for 2013 administrative Palace Nile, and 21 for 2013 misdemeanors Palace of the Nile, and 921 for 2013, the Attorney General's statements, Official.

According to the reports and reports, "telephone monitors" - in addition to investigations and records - revealed that the UAE and its embassy in Cairo were funding "gang formations to carry out systematic criminal projects intended to cause chaos and assault on police forces."

"Ihab Mustafa Hassan Ammar" and his name "Ihab Ammar" for the purpose mentioned, and the security services obtained those details from the authorized control of the prosecution.

Confessions and Observations
The records and investigations included confessions of defendants and phone monitors that proved the details mentioned, and described certain names as "heads of federally funded organizations that deliberately create chaos and intimidate citizens and prevent public authorities from starting their work."

It also included "exploiting peaceful demonstrations and marches in their midst to provide them with the opportunity to carry out their criminal projects from looting, looting and killing to provoke chaos in the country, and that these people in the implementation of their schemes receive funding including money and weapons to supply their gangs."

The lecturer and security investigations also said that some of the defendants were related to members of the Salvation Front and an assistant to the Minister of the Interior at the time.

For his part, denied the former leader of the Front, Majdi Hamdan, aware of any funding of this kind, stressing that what was known is the financing of Abu Dhabi to the rebellion movement and groups, "Black Block" secret.