Friday, July 5, 2013

Violence erupts in Egypt By Ben Wedeman and Tom Watkins, CNN July 5, 2013 -


Violence erupts in Egypt

By Ben Wedeman and Tom Watkins, CNN
July 5, 2013 -- Updated 1911 GMT (0311 HKT)
Supporters of ousted Egyptian President Mohamed Morsy pray before a protest near the University of Cairo in Giza, Egypt, on Friday, July 5. They are calling for Morsy's restoration to the presidency two days after a military coup. <a href='http://www.cnn.com/2013/06/29/middleeast/gallery/egypt-protest/index.html'>View photos of protests that erupted before the coup.</a>Supporters of ousted Egyptian President Mohamed Morsy pray before a protest near the University of Cairo in Giza, Egypt, on Friday, July 5. They are calling for Morsy's restoration to the presidency two days after a military coup. View photos of protests that erupted before the coup.
HIDE CAPTION
Egypt after the coup
<<
<
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
>
>>
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • NEW: Intense clashes break out in Cairo between Morsy's supporters and opponents
  • The Freedom and Justice Party says 5 dead outside Republican Guard headquarters
  • "Return to the arms of the nation!" the Brotherhood leader asks of the army
  • Egyptian police and army personnel are attacked in the Sinai Peninsula
Are you in Egypt? Send us your experiences, but please stay safe.
Cairo (CNN) -- [Breaking news update, 3:07 p.m. ET]
Intense clashes broke out Friday night in Cairo between supporters of deposed President Mohamed Morsy and their opponents on a bridge near Tahrir Square, according to video footage.
The clashes began on the bridge after a standoff that saw anti-Morsy demonstrators advance on the former president's supporters, with both sides throwing rocks and other items at each other as hundreds of people ran, the footage showed.
A car could be seen burning on the bridge, and the two sides attempted to be erecting independent barricades.It was not immediately known if there were casualties in the clashes.
[Original story published at 3:09 p.m. ET]
Violence erupts in Egypt
Violence erupted here Friday as supporters of Mohamed Morsyturned out en masse in cities around the country, calling for his restoration to the presidency two days after his ouster in a military coup.
Five Morsy supporters were shot dead by the army in front of the headquarters of the Republican Guard headquarters, where the ousted president was reported to be detained, the Muslim Brotherhood's political wing -- the Freedom and Justice Party -- said Friday night.
The health ministry reported that at least two people were killed and 65 injured in clashes there.
The clashes occurred when Morsy supporters tried to storm the building, state broadcaster Nile TV said.
CNN's Reza Sayah, reporting from outside the building, said he had seen one body around which scores of Morsy supporters were huddled, some of them crying.
A few feet away, demonstrators faced off across a barbed-wire barricade behind which stood a line of soldiers who detonated flash grenades and fired tear gas in an apparent attempt to get the demonstrators to move away.
Morsy supporters turn out en masse
Supporters vow to return Morsy to palace
Pro-Morsy protesters hit with tear gas
Muslim Brotherhood remains defiant
Many of them did just that, though thousands of others remained in defiance. Demonstrators could be seen carrying away a wounded man. Some demonstrators waved flags and held pictures of Morsy and vowed not to leave until the military returns Morsy to office.
But Nile TV, citing a security source, said live ammunition had not been used against demonstrators and no one was hurt or killed.
The incidents occurred in the wake of Wednesday's move by the nation's powerful military to remove Morsy from power.
Morsy had become the nation's first democratically elected president a year ago, but failed to fix the nation's ailing economy or improve its crime problems and was seen by many as increasingly autocratic.
Human Rights Watch has said he had continued abusive practices established by the former dictatorship of Hosni Mubarak, who was pushed out in 2011 after three decades of iron rule supported by the U.S. government. Military courts continued trying civilians; police abuses were allowed.
"Numerous journalists, political activists, and others were prosecuted on charges of 'insulting' officials or institutions and 'spreading false information,'" the rights group said.
Throngs of protesters filled Egyptian streets for days, calling for him to step down.
The president's supporters turned out at massive counter demonstrations. At times, the two sides clashed with deadly consequences.
On Monday, the army gave him 48 hours to agree to share power or be pushed aside.
On Wednesday, the military rejected Morsy's conciliatory gestures as insufficient and announced its "road map" to stability and new elections.
Morsy and a number of leaders of the Brotherhood were arrested and may face charges over the deaths of protesters during clashes with Morsy's supporters, many of whom also died.
Moves spark outrage
A day later, Adly Mansour, head of the country's Supreme Constitutional Court, was sworn in as interim president.
He dissolved Egypt's upper house of parliament, the Shura Council, and appointed a new head of intelligence, Egyptian state TV said Friday.
The moves sparked outrage among Egyptians who saw them as counter to what their fledgling democracy was supposed to have been all about.
Mohamed Badie, the Brotherhood's spiritual leader, exhorted the thousands of people who packed the area around the Rabaa Adawiya mosque in Cairo to fight back.
"The coup is illegal and we will never accept its results," said Badie, whose title is supreme guide of the Muslim Brotherhood. "We sacrificed so dearly to reach this point, and we will never return to the past again."
Badie challenged the Egyptian army to "return to the arms of the nation."
The furor appeared to escalate during the day. By nightfall, a car was burning on the 6th of October Bridge leading to Cairo's Tahrir Square, which had been a focal point for demonstrators seeking to remove Morsy from power and where supporters of the military turned out Friday in reduced numbers.
In Haram, a neighborhood of Giza in greater Cairo, one person was killed and seven were injured when a group of armed men attacked a police station, a spokesman for the health ministry said.
At least 10 people were injured in clashes between supporters of Morsy and residents in the city of Damanhour, about 160 kilometers (100 miles) northwest of Cairo, Nile TV said Friday.
And state television showed pictures from Alexandria of security forces firing tear gas at pro-Morsy demonstrators.
Outside Cairo University, throngs of pro-Morsy demonstrators formed human chains as others participating in a sit-in shouted, "Police are thugs!"
Egypt's armed forces said they would guarantee the rights of protesters as long the protests resulted in neither violence nor destruction of property.
The demonstrations occurred as the African Union announced Friday that it has suspended Egypt from its ranks of member countries.
The AU's Peace and Security Council also said it was sending a team to Egypt to work toward restoring constitutional order.
Dismantling the Brotherhood?
Police were seeking 300 Brotherhood members, state media reported.
A spokesman for Morsy's Freedom and Justice Party said Thursday the coup had turned into "very, very questionable attempts by the military to dismantle the Brotherhood."
But the Freedom and Justice Party chief, Saad el-Katatni, and the party deputy, Rashad Al-Bayoumi, who were arrested Thursday in Egypt after the overthrow of Mohamed Morsy, had been released, Egyptian state broadcaster, Nile TV, reported Friday.
The democratic Tamarod movement, which had sought Morsy's ouster, has nominated Mohamed ElBaradei, an opposition leader, to become prime minister.
ElBaradei, the former head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, described Morsy's ouster as a "correction of the uprising of 2011."
Other opposition leaders and protesters have objected to the use of "coup" to describe the military's removal of the elected president via non-democratic means.
President Barack Obama said the United States was "deeply concerned" about the move, but did not use the word "coup."
Washington has supplied Egypt's military with tens of billions of dollars in support and equipment for more than 30 years. Under U.S. law, that support could be cut off after a coup.
More violence
On Friday, Islamist gunmen attacked Egyptian police stations and checkpoints in the Sinai, killing at least one soldier, agencies reported.
A senior intelligence officer who would not agree to being identified said two police officers were killed in the northern Sinai city of Arish when a group of men drove by the police station and shot them.
The assaults may have nothing to do with extremist threats to avenge Morsy's overthrow.
The desert peninsula next to Israel and Gaza has long eluded the control of Egyptian security forces, leaving extremists affiliated with al Qaeda plenty of room to establish themselves.
Chronic violence troubled the Sinai years before it did the rest of Egypt.
The army said it was on high alert, a level below maximum alert, in the Sinai and Suez provinces.
Egypt is the largest Arab country in the world and a close ally of the United States, which gives it $1.5 billion per year for military and civilian programs.
It controls the Suez Canal, a crucial sea route through which more than 4% of the world's oil and 8% of its seaborne trade travel.
With Jordan, it is one of two Arab countries that has made peace with Israel.
Egypt content from around the Web
Wendell Steavenson writes about the scale of the Cairo protests and their consequences for the New Yorker.
Under the headline "Egypt's Tragedy," London-based news magazine The Economist says Morsy was incompetent but his removal by the military is a cause for regret:
The Jerusalem Post's diplomatic correspondent Herb Keinon writes that the unpredictability of the Arab Spring has been problematic for Israel, which has "no interest in its largest neighbor becoming a failed state."
In its editorial, the Sydney Morning Herald says the Egyptian army's "decision to intervene one year after the election was premature" and creates "the impression that mobs can bring down the government."
In a blog carried by The Guardian newspaper, Nafeez Ahmed blames declining oil revenue, an overdependence on food imports, ongoing unemployment and a growing population for the unrest in Egypt.
CNN's Ben Wedeman, Ian Lee and Becky Anderson reported from Cairo; Tom Watkins wrote from Atlanta. CNN's Jill Dougherty, Chelsea J. Carter and Ben Brumfield contributed to this report.
ADVERTISEMENT
Part of complete coverage on
Egypt
July 3, 2013 -- Updated 2128 GMT (0528 HKT)
With Mohamed Morsy out, what's next for Egypt? CNN's Christiane Amanpour explains what's in store for "the new Egypt."
July 3, 2013 -- Updated 1431 GMT (2231 HKT)
Gang rape is an often overlooked aspect of the Egyptian revolution, writes Nina Burleigh.
July 3, 2013 -- Updated 1929 GMT (0329 HKT)
The Egyptian military has played a major role throughout the country's history. CNN's Atika Shubert reports.
July 3, 2013 -- Updated 2150 GMT (0550 HKT)
CNN's Christiane Amanpour speaks to the Egyptian ambassador to the U.S. about the importance of an inclusive government.
July 3, 2013 -- Updated 1953 GMT (0353 HKT)
Opposition leader Mohamed ElBaradei says the ouster of Mohamed Morsy will help bring democratic reform to Egypt.
July 4, 2013 -- Updated 2319 GMT (0719 HKT)
Street protests lead to the end of Egypt's first democratically elected president.
July 3, 2013 -- Updated 2042 GMT (0442 HKT)
Two years after massive demonstrations forced out longtime leader Hosni Mubarak, Egypt finds itself right back where it started.
July 3, 2013 -- Updated 2021 GMT (0421 HKT)
Egyptians who campaigned to end the Morsy presidency explain why they protested.
June 28, 2013 -- Updated 1108 GMT (1908 HKT)
"Sometimes you're too emotional to do things that might be illegal, so you revert to sarcasm and comedy," says Egypt's "Jon Stewart."
July 3, 2013 -- Updated 1205 GMT (2005 HKT)
Worsening violence amid anti-government protests in Egypt led western governments to step up their travel advice.
ADVERTISEMENT

No comments:

Post a Comment