Morsi's wife visits him in prison in first face-to-face contact since ouster
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The family of Egypt's toppled president visited him in prison on Thursday, their first face-to-face contact with him since a popularly-backed military coup ousted him from power four months ago, his wife said.
Naglaa Ali told The Associated Press by phone that she and other family members met with Mohammed Morsi inside a maximum-security prison called Borg al-Arab, which sits in a remote desert area near Alexandria, Egypt's second city.
Ali said the visit, monitored by security officers, lasted one hour.
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"Thank God, it's just like I saw him yesterday. ... He is more steadfast and bold," she told the AP when asked about his condition.
A high-ranking Interior Ministry official later told the AP that Morsi was warned to send any secret messages through his conversation with his family. The official said Morsi was told violating that rule would see restrictions placed on his visits.
The official spoke on condition of anonymity as details of Morsi's detention were not to be made public.
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However, Morsi's son Osama later told Qatar-based satellite news channel Al-Jazeera Mubashir Misr that Morsi sent a message to the Egyptian people "to uphold the revolution."
Morsi was toppled in a July 3 coup after millions took to the streets demanding him to step down. He had been held at a secret military facility with no access to outside world, only allowed to make a few short telephone calls to his family.
That changed Monday, when Morsi appeared in public for the first time since the coup at a hearing on charges he incited murder and violence during clashes last year outside the presidential palace. Morsi's family didn't attend the hearing.
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"It was just as I expected. He was assuring me and I was assuring him," Morsi's wife said.
Asked if she was worried about his condition, she said: "We didn't waste time discussing these matters."
Morsi spent his first night at Borg el-Arab in a hospital room, complaining of high blood pressure and high blood sugar, officials said. The 62 year old has been reported to have a number of ailments, including diabetes and a peptic ulcer.
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The Interior Ministry official said Thursday that Morsi spends his time reading the Quran. He also can receive food from outside of the prison and a special medical team monitors his condition.
Morsi's defense team is expected to visit Saturday, the official said.
While Morsi and leaders of his group, the Muslim Brotherhood, face charges related to violence during Morsi's one-year rule, Morsi's predecessor Hosni Mubarak could return to prison in mid-November.
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Prime Minister Hazem el-Beblawi told daily newspaper Al-Masry Al-Youm in an interview published Thursday that Mubarak will return to prison as lawmakers recently changed the country's detention laws.
Mubarak is now under house arrest at a military hospital after being held for two years. Previously under Egyptian law, authorities only could detain prisoners on trial for capital crimes for two years.
Mubarak is being retried on charges related to the killing of nearly 900 protesters during 2011 uprising that led to his ouster. He also faces separate charges in corruption cases.