Violence
flares in Cairo as thousands protest Morsi regime throughout Egypt
Protests
turn violent in key Egyptian cities again on Friday, as thousands
take to the streets to demand the end of Morsi’s government. Petrol
bomb-throwing protesters clash with the police in front of the
presidential palace in Cairo
RT,
31
January, 2013
At
least 48 people were injured following the Friday clashes in Cairo,
Al Arabiya reported.
Protesters
threw Molotov cocktails and launced fireworks over the gates of the
presidential building, Cairo-based journalist Bel Trew told RT. The
angry crowds were pushed back by the teargas-firing security forces
on armored vehicles, she added.
"People
are still chanting in amongst this chaos that the president must step
down, and this is the sentiment accross the capital," Trew
reported.
Petrol
bombs and stones were also reportedly thrown at the British Embassy
in Cairo, according to Al-Arabiya.
Egypt’s
presidential office has called political factions to withdraw from
outside the president’s palace, Al-Arabiya said. Egyptian PM Hesham
Qandil has also urged all political parties to condemn violent
protesters.
But
the opposition is unlikely to call the people off the streets after
it spoke in favor of mass demonstrations despite Thursday talks with
Sheikh Ahmed Al-Tayyeb of Al-Azhar University. Al-Tayyeb, a
well-respected spiritual figure in Egypt, urged the rival sides to
renounce violence and agree to set up a committee to start peaceful
talks. “The marches for tomorrow are still on, as the Azhar
document condemns violence but we are not doing anything violent,”
one of the opposition members was cited by Reuters.
Chaos
and violence will continue if Morsi ignores the peoples’ demands,
the opposition leader Mohamed ElBaradei said on Friday according to
Al-Arabiya. Egypt’s National Salvation Front will meet Saturday to
discuss the latest developments, Al-Arabiya added.
Sporadic
clashes with the police in Cairo were also reported earlier Friday,
and several protesters were injured by rubber bullets.
Several
thousand people have gathered in Tahrir square on Friday, Bel Trew
told RT.
“We
came here to get rid of Morsi. He's only a president for the
Brotherhood,” a protester told Reuters from amid the angry crowd
that filled Tahrir square.
“I
am here because I want my rights, the ones the revolution called for
and which were never achieved,” another protester said.
Protesters
dressed in black marched through the streets of Port Said, Alexandria
and Ismailia chanting anti-Morsi slogans and proclaiming their anger
over the nearly 60 victims of the recent civil unrest.
The
Suez Canal city of Port Said saw crowds of protesters shouting,
shaking their fists and carrying portraits of those shot in fierce
clashes with police last weekend.
“We
will die like they did, to get justice!” the protesters chanted
according to Reuters. Recent unrest in the Suez Canal area has
prompted the Egyptian government to deploy the army and impose a
curfew, as the head of the armed forces warned the state was on the
verge of “collapse.”
For
the people protesting in Port Said, Friday also meant a year since
the football stadium riot that left 74 people dead and hundreds
injured.
In
Alexandria hundreds of marching protesters blocked a major traffic
intersection, Reuters said.
The
last spike of violence in Egypt marked the second anniversary of the
January 25 revolution. Last week’s deadly clashes proved the
protesters demanding Morsi's government overthrow are not giving in.
The Egyptian opposition has also persisted in its demands to form a
unity government and have the controversial constitution amended.
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