Former Egyptian prime minister Hisham Qandil, who served under ousted President Mohammed Morsi, was today acquitted by a court here for failing to implement a court ruling to re-nationalise a company that was privatised in 1996.
A Cairo court has accepted the appeal presented by Qandil and overturned his one-year jail sentence.
In September 2013, the Cairo Misdemeanour Court upheld a ruling against former Prime Minister Qandil sentencing him to one year in prison for failing to implement the Administrative Court verdict ordering the re-nationalisation of the Tanta Flax and Oil Company.
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Qandil served as the prime minister of Egypt from August 2012 to July 2013 during the presidency of Morsi.
He left office after the ouster of the Islamist president on 3 July, 2013.
Qandil represented an alliance of pro-Morsi Islamist groups in meetings with European Union mediators, who tried to persuade the military-installed interim government to launch a fully inclusive transition process that included the Muslim Brotherhood.
However, he kept a low profile after the authorities launched a fierce crackdown on the Brotherhood in August last year, in which hundreds of people have been killed and thousands detained.


