100,000
Egyptians protest as ‘Pharaoh’ Morsi digs heels in over power
grab
Police fired tear gas after hundreds of demonstrators began pelting them with rocks on a street between the US Embassy and the historic square which served as the epicenter of the uprising that toppled authoritarian president Hosni Mubarak nearly two years ago.
Meanwhile, protesters stormed the headquarters of the Muslim Brotherhood in the country’s second largest city of Alexandria. The crowd broke in to the building hurling papers and furniture from a balcony.
Egyptian protesters wave their national flag as they shout political slogans against President Mohamed Morsi's decree granting himself broad powers during a demonstration in Cairo's Tahrir Square on November 27, 2012 (AFP Photo / Gianluigi Guercia)
Anti-Mursi judges gather at Tahrir Square in Cairo November 27, 2012 (Reuters / Ahmed Jadallah)
A general view of anti-Mursi protesters chanting anti-government slogans in Tahrir Square in Cairo November 27, 2012 (Reuters / Asmaa Waguih)
Protesters run to hide from tear gas during clashes with police near Tahrir Square as anti-Morsi protesters start to gather in the square in Cairo November 27, 2012. (Reuters / Asmaa Waguih)
Egyptian protesters wave their national flag as they shout political slogans against President Mohamed Morsi's decree granting himself broad powers during a demonstrations in Cairo's Tahrir Square on November 27, 2012. (AFP Photo / Gianluigi Guercia)
Riot police use tear gas during clashes with anti-Morsi protesters at Tahrir Square in Cairo November 27, 2012. (Reuters / Ahmed Jadallah)
Police
in Cairo used teargas against protesters after clashes erupted on
Tahrir Square, leaving one dead. The violence came before a
100,000-strong rally demanding the country’s Islamist president
withdraw decrees vastly expanding his power.
RT,
28 November, 2012
Meanwhile, protesters stormed the headquarters of the Muslim Brotherhood in the country’s second largest city of Alexandria. The crowd broke in to the building hurling papers and furniture from a balcony.
Activists
reported that a protester in his 20s died in Cairo as a result of
being exposed to too much tear gas, making him the fourth person to
lose his life in clashes across Egypt over the last five days.
Egypt’s
ministry of interior reported on Tuesday 348 “troublemakers” had
been arrested following street battles between police and protesters.
Around 216 policemen were reportedly injured in the clashes.
Liberal
and secular demonstrators, as well as those loyal to former president
Hosni Mubarak, have been staging sit-in protests on the square since
Friday to demand President Mohamed Morsi revoke recent decrees
granting him sweeping powers.
Later
in the evening, tends of thousands poured onto Tahrir Square aftering
marching from various points throughout the city. Amidst a sea of
Egyptian flags, the crowd chanted slogans against Morsi and the
Muslim Brotherhood.
Egyptian protesters wave their national flag as they shout political slogans against President Mohamed Morsi's decree granting himself broad powers during a demonstration in Cairo's Tahrir Square on November 27, 2012 (AFP Photo / Gianluigi Guercia)
The
Muslim Brotherhood, who backed Morsi’s presidential bid, and the
ultraconservative Nour party decided to cancel a counterdemonstration
amidst concerns it would lead to more violence.
Rallies
are also being held in the Nile Delta cities of Mansura, Tanta and
Mahla and in the central provinces of Assiut, Sohag and Minya.
Thousands
of protesters in Mahla, who gathered on the central square claim to
have come under fire during their rally.
“People
started chanting against Morsy and the Muslim Brotherhood while in
the square which is near the Freedom and Justice Party (FJP)
headquarters,” and “suddenly
bullets started flying everywhere from the FJP direction.”Mohamed
Fathi told Daily News Egypt.
Watch report of the Cairo-based journalist Bel Trew
Watch report of the Cairo-based journalist Bel Trew
Khaled
El-Shami, editor of the Al Quds Al-Arabi newspaper, said the ongoing
protests are not a reflection of any sectarian divide, but rather a
stand-off between political Islamists and supporters of civil rights.
“Looking
at this crowd, you cannot tell who is Muslim or Christian, who is
liberal or leftist, this is the real people of Egypt that have always
been known as moderates saying no to new religious fascism making the
president above the law,” he
said.
“The
people of Egypt, who I believe are the majority, are going to insist
that this decree be canceled,” El-Shami
continued.
Meanwhile,
former presidential candidate Hamdeen Sabahy has launched a movement
called the Popular Current and has joined several other opposition
leaders to denounce the decree.
He
was quoted as saying at a news conference, “Our
decision is to continue in the square, and we will not leave before
this declaration is brought down.” He
also said that Tahrir Square would be a model of an “Egypt
that will not accept a new dictator because it brought down the old
one.”
Yet
President Morsi insists that his power seizure is “temporary”,
and is open to political dialogue. He had agreed to meet the
country's judges on Monday to negotiate a solution to the crisis,
though no
amendments to
the declaration were forthcoming.
“The
presidency reiterates the temporary nature of these measures, which
are not intended to concentrate power,”Morsi
stated. “The
presidency stresses its firm commitment to engage all political
forces in an inclusive democratic dialogue to reach a common ground.”
On
Thursday Morsi issued
an edict which
effectively eliminated judicial oversight of his decrees, laws and
decisions until a new constitution is ratified. He further said no
court could dissolve the Islamist-dominated constituent assembly
which is currently drafting the country’s new national charter.
He
extended the assembly’s deadline to finish drafting the new
constitution by two months, which was previously scheduled to be
completed by December 5.
Anti-Mursi judges gather at Tahrir Square in Cairo November 27, 2012 (Reuters / Ahmed Jadallah)
Since
Thursday’s announcement, a number of Freedom and Justice Party and
Muslim Brotherhood offices throughout the country have been torched –
while more than 500 people have been injured in violent protests.
One
person has been killed and dozens injured as anti-government
protesters attacked a provincial capital's Muslim Brotherhood office.
Meanwhile,
more than 1,000 strikes have taken place in the past two months,
which signals the largest wave of industrial action since the fall of
Hosni Mubarak.
This
has included action by the nation’s 100,000 doctors, who have
threatened to resign en masse. One of Morsi’s main aims through the
acquisition of further powers was to deal with this emerging social
movement.
A general view of anti-Mursi protesters chanting anti-government slogans in Tahrir Square in Cairo November 27, 2012 (Reuters / Asmaa Waguih)
Protesters run to hide from tear gas during clashes with police near Tahrir Square as anti-Morsi protesters start to gather in the square in Cairo November 27, 2012. (Reuters / Asmaa Waguih)
Egyptian protesters wave their national flag as they shout political slogans against President Mohamed Morsi's decree granting himself broad powers during a demonstrations in Cairo's Tahrir Square on November 27, 2012. (AFP Photo / Gianluigi Guercia)
Riot police use tear gas during clashes with anti-Morsi protesters at Tahrir Square in Cairo November 27, 2012. (Reuters / Ahmed Jadallah)
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