Morsi
declares state of emergency in Egypt hours after three people die in
fresh clashes
Egyptian
President Mohamed Morsi has declared a 30-day state of emergency in
Egypt after ongoing clashes and protests led to the deaths of 48
people and left hundreds injured. Three people were killed in the
town of Port Said on Sunday.
Egyptian
President Mohamed Morsi has declared a 30-day state of emergency in
Egypt after ongoing clashes and protests led to the deaths of 48
people and left hundreds injured. Three people were killed in the
town of Port Said on Sunday.
Morsi
also set curfews in Port Said, Suez, Ismailia, where there have been
clashes.
"I
promised not to take extraordinary measures unless I was forced to,
and here I am doing so. I announce a state of emergency in the cities
of Ismailia, Suez and Port Said for a period of 30 days,"
President Morsi said in his televised address on Sunday evening.
"I
instructed interior ministry officials to strictly deal with whoever
threatens people and public and private institutions," he said.
The
state of emergency would start at midnight.
"The
protection of the nation is the responsibility of everyone. We will
confront any threat to its security with force and firmness within
the remit of the law," Mursi said.
18-year-old
Abdel Rahman Farag was killed by a gunshot wound to the chest, the
head of Port Said hospitals told Reuters. No immediate details were
available about the other two victims. More than 416 people suffered
from teargas inhalation, while 17 sustained gunshot wounds, he said.
“There
are still bloody and chaotic scenes in Port Said…the army has been
deployed…eyewitnesses say they see tanks on the street at the
moment," journalist Bel Trew, who is in Cairo, told RT.
Muslim
Brotherhood leader Mohamed El-Beltagy has urged Egyptian authorities
to "step in with full strength in order to prevent the killing
of civilians."
Thousands
of people turned out for the funerals of 35 rioters who were killed
in Port Said on Saturday. The mourners shouted,"There is no God
but Allah, and Morsi is God's enemy" after praying for the dead
at the city's Mariam Mosque. Teargas was fired in the vicinity and
gunfire was heard nearby. Emergency vehicle sirens were also heard, a
witness told Reuters.
Thousands
of demonstrators also gathered in Cairo's Tahrir Square on Sunday.
Protesters threw petrol bombs at riot police who responded by firing
teargas.
Rallies
have been taking place in Cairo, Alexandria, Suez and half a dozen
other places, many of which have become violent. Protesters have
taken to the streets in greater numbers following Saturday’s death
sentence verdicts over a stadium stampede last February.
The
Egyptian city of Port Said has experienced the most violent clashes,
with 32 killed on Saturday alone. Armored vehicles and military
police have attempted to quell the violent protests in the town of
600,000. However, protests reach back to Friday when nine people were
killed in a separate demonstration against of the Islamist Egyptian
President Mohamed Morsi.
The
outbreak of violence is a consequence of Saturday’s sentencing of
21 people to death for their role in the deaths of 74 people at a
soccer stadium riot and stampede last year.
Spectators
were trampled and eyewitnesses saw some thrown off balconies
following a match between Al Ahly and local team al-Masri. Many Al
Ahly fans accused police of playing a role in the deaths.
The
sentencing was reportedly followed by the immediate deaths of two
policemen
About
18 prisoners in Suez police stations managed to escape during the
violence, a security source reported. Approximately 30 police weapons
were stolen. Soldiers have taken up positions at important state
facilities, including the local power and water stations,
administration buildings, banks and courts.
Protests
have been spreading throughout Egyptian cities since Thursday, prior
to the sentencing. Opponents of Morsi have been gathering to mark the
second anniversary on Friday of the beginning of the revolution that
led to Hosni Mubarak’s overthrow.
Morsi
has condemned the violence, and appealed for calm among the
population. He has proposed “a broad national dialogue”, and
Egypt’s army has been summoned to prevent any further escalation
for the violence. However, his opposition believes that he has
betrayed the economic and representative goals of the previous
revolt.
"None
of the revolution's goals have been realized," protester Mohamed
Sami told Reuters.
“There’s
a lot of anger towards the president – this started just at the end
of last year when he pushed through what was seen as an unpopular
constitution drafted by an Islamist dominated constituent assembly.
People also say that he has not made any of the changes that were
called for during the January 25 revolution two years ago, so he’s
really lost quite a lot of legitimacy on the streets,” Trew said.
“Right
now here in the capital there are clashes raging between protesters
and security forces on the…lots of tear gas in the air here in
down-town Cairo. Rocks have also been exchanged.”
“Security
have upped up their presence around government buildings, as the
focus of the anger here for protesters is very much against Morsi’s
administration… the situation in Egypt really descends into a bit
of a crisis”
Over
450 people have allegedly been killed in the unrest, and 47 have been
killed since January 25.
The
52 defendants not sentenced yesterday will have their verdict read
out on March 9, according to the judge.
Morsi
will face elections, which will supposedly mark the country’s
transition to democracy in June.
The
US embassy in Cairo, said on Sunday that it was suspending public
services on account of “the security situation in the vicinity”
of its building in Tahrir Square.
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