7 dead, 261 injured, 401 arrested in overnight Egypt clashes
Seven people were killed and 261 wounded when supporters of Mohamed Morsi clashed with opponents of the former president and security forces in Cairo overnight, the head of Egypt's emergency services said. Some 401 people were arrested over the clashes.
Pro-Morsi demonstrators were attempting to block vital main road that runs through the center of the Egyptian capital.
Gas canisters were reportedly fired into a throng of protesters
who chanted "peaceful, peaceful" and "the police are
thugs," wrote Egyptian site Ahramonline.
Follow RT's LIVE UPDATES on post-coup violence in Egypt.
Police allegedly responded after the mob started throwing rocks and molotov cocktails at security forces.
There are reports that security forces also used birdshot against the activists.
Photo of tear gas shot on pro-Morsi groups in Ramsis Street in Cairo, Egypt, via @a7med_eltawilpic.twitter.com/urXMonTm67
— Patrick deHahn (@patrickdehahn) July 15, 2013
Two policemen were injured in scuffles, according to Ahram
Online. At least 22 protesters have been injured in clashes on
the 6th October Bridge and on Ramsis Street, Egyptian Ambulance
Organization head Mohamed Sultan said. Meanwhile, activists
reported on Twitter that up to 300 protesters suffered tear gas
inhalation.
Egypt’s interior ministry claimed that it had to resolve to using
force after activists halted traffic and attacked security
forces.
The ministry said that protesters were warned “against
disrupting public order” before tear gas was fired.
Locals at the scenes say no one has been killed so far but that a number of ambulances are on their way. It is reported that pro-Morsi demonstrators blocked off the bridge by parking trucks on both sides, throwing stones at security forces as they deployed tear gas canisters.
Street fights also took place between opposing groups in the
Gamra district, with both sides allegedly firing birdshot. State
news agency MENA also reported firefights near Giza Square in
Cairo. Around 2,000 Morsi supporters marched to the Republican
Guard headquarters in Nasr City on Monday, demanding the return
of the ousted leader. MENA said that another march took place
near the Ittihadia presidential palace.
Egypt’s Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) has issued a statement
following Monday’s protests, Al Jazeera reports. In it, the
Islamist party says that security forces fired tear gas canisters
and rubber bullets at peaceful protesters who were praying in
Ramses Square. Such use of force violates Egyptians’ right to
peacefully demonstrate, which is guaranteed to the people of
Egypt. The attacks on demonstrators indicate that the new
government plans to shed more blood, the FJP stated.
No shotgun injuries so far, only tear gas inhalation symptoms. pic.twitter.com/uAjCJWhFud
— Mohamed Lotfy (@mlotfy81) July 15, 2013
It was reported that press crews were attacked as security forces
tried to disperse the pro-Morsi crowd. A photographer working for
Anadolu News Agency sustained a leg injury in Cairo’s Ramses
Square. A team from Sky News Arabia was also allegedly attacked
while covering the turmoil in Ramses Square.
One group of protesters blocked the 6th October Bridge while
another announced a sit-in at Cairo’s Ramsis Square, Ahram
reports. The protesters are carrying giant Egyptian flags,
banners and portraits of Morsi. The crowd also accused the United
States of instigating and supporting the military coup that
removed Morsi from power on July 3. Thousands of Morsi supporters
also set up a tent camp outside Cairo University.
Local media outlets report that street vendors are refusing to
let pro-Morsi supporters stage a sit-in around the city.
It was also reported that military police stopped roughly 5,000
Morsi supporters from aiding the activists on Ramsis square near
Rabaa Al Adawyia Mosque in Cairo's Naser City, Ahram
reports.
Meanwhile, those backing the military have staged a support rally
in Tahrir square.
Smaller pro-Morsi Demonstrations were also reported in
Alexandria, Luxor, Damanhour and Suez.
Earlier on Monday, the armed forces said they would respond with “the utmost severity and firmness and force” if a crowd approached military bases.
The ferociousness of the protests corresponded with the
announcement by Egypt's public prosecutor that arrest warrants
had been issued for seven senior Islamist figures - including
members of the Muslim Brotherhood. The men are charged with
instigating violence during the latest power change in Egypt.
The list includes Essam el-Erian and Mohamed el-Beltagi, both of
whom were attending a demonstration on Monday, Reuters reported.
The two individuals were ordered to be apprehended last week, but
so far have not been arrested.
The protests also coincide with the visit of a senior US
official, Deputy Secretary of State William Burns, who went to
Egypt following the overthrow of Mohamed Morsi.
Burns met with army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and urged
Egyptians to return to civilian rule. He also called on all
parties involved to engage in dialogue.
The US position on the conflict remains to put “an end to all
violence and a transition leading to an inclusive, democratically
elected civilian government,” a statement from the US State
Department said.
The violence is the first altercation involving pro-Morsi supporters in a week. Last Monday 53 pro-Muslim Brotherhood activists perished in massive clashes in Cairo. The army subsequently blamed the deaths on demonstrators.