Resuming the trial of an Egyptian tycoon allegedly accused of paying an ex-policeman LE2 million to kill Lebanese diva Suzanne Tamim, a Cairo criminal court decided Saturday to summon the chief prosecutor of the Gulf emirate of Dubai. The court also decided to obtain the fingerprints of a British national who had an affair with the singer. "The court responded to our demand to get the fingerprints of Alex Kazaki, who had used to meet the Lebanese singer Suzanne Tamim in Dubai," a lawyer for real-estate tycoon Hesham Talaat Moustafa said after the proceedings. He added that the court also decided to summon Dubai's chief prosecutor, and an Egyptian forensic doctor to examine the fingerprints of the charged policeman, Mohsen el-Sukkari, as well as those of Kazaki. Both Moustafa and el-Sukkari were sentenced to death for killing Tamim, before Egypt's Cassation court granted them a retrial. The hearings resume Sunday.