Egypt
locked in standoff after millions rally against Mursi
Egypt
was locked in a tense standoff on Monday after millions of protesters
swarmed into the streets to demand the resignation of Islamist
President Mohamed Mursi and militants set the ruling Muslim
Brotherhood's headquarters on fire.
30
June, 2013
Young revolutionaries united with liberal and leftist opposition parties in a massive show of defiance on the first anniversary of Mursi's inauguration on Sunday, chanting "the people demand the fall of the regime".
The
demonstrations, which brought half a million people to Cairo's
central Tahrir Square and a similar crowd in the second city,
Alexandria, were easily the largest since the Arab Spring uprising
that ousted Hosni Mubarak in 2011.
Mursi,
the most populous Arab state's first freely elected leader, stayed
out of sight but acknowledged through a spokesman that he had made
mistakes while adding that he was working to fix them and was open to
dialogue. He showed no sign of quitting.
The
massive protests showed that the ruling Muslim Brotherhood has not
only alienated liberals and secularists by seeking to entrench
Islamic rule but has also angered millions of ordinary Egyptians with
economic mismanagement.
Tourism
and investment have dried up, inflation is rampant and fuel supplies
are running short, with power cuts lengthening in the summer heat.
Dozens
of militants attacked the Brotherhood's national headquarters in
Cairo with shotguns, petrol bombs and rocks, setting it on fire, and
targeted offices of its political party across the country.
There
was no sign of police or fire service protection for the
Brotherhood's head office, where witnesses said guards inside the
building fired on the attackers. Two people died and 11 were injured
in that clash, hospital sources said.
Protest
organizers called on Egyptians to keep occupying central squares
across the country in a campaign of peaceful civil disobedience until
Mursi quits.
Tens
of thousands of demonstrators stayed in Tahrir Square long after
midnight, appearing to heed the call for a sit-in.
SPOTLIGHT
ON ARMY
That
put the spotlight on the army, which displayed its neutrality on
Sunday, making goodwill gestures to the protesters after urging
feuding politicians last week to cooperate to solve the nation's
problems.
Some
uniformed policemen marched among protesters in Cairo and Alexandria,
chanting "the police and the people are one", and several
senior officers addressed the Tahrir Square crowd.
That
cast doubt on whether Mursi could rely on the security forces to
clear the streets if he gave the order.
Diplomats
said the army, which ruled uneasily during the transition from
Mubarak's fall to Mursi's election, had signaled it was deeply
reluctant to step in again, unless violence got out of hand and
national security was at stake.
While
the main demonstrations were peaceful and festive in atmosphere,
seven people were shot dead in clashes in the central cities of
Assiut, Beni Suef and Fayoum and outside the Brotherhood's Cairo
headquarters. The Health Ministry said 613 people were injured in
street fighting around the country.
Women's
activists said at least 43 women, including a foreign journalist,
suffered organized sexual assaults by gangs of men during the Tahrir
Square rally.
The
opposition National Salvation Front coalition of liberal, secular and
left-wing parties declared victory, saying the masses had "confirmed
the downfall of the regime of Mohamed Mursi and the Muslim
Brotherhood".
NEXT
MOVE UNCLEAR
Opposition
leaders, who have seen previous protest waves fizzle after a few days
in December and January, were to meet on Monday afternoon to plot
their next move.
Influential
Qatar-based Muslim cleric Sheikh Youssef Qaradawi, visiting Cairo,
appealed to Egyptians to show more patience with Mursi, while saying
the president had made errors.
"How
long has Mohamed Mursi ruled? One year," Qaradawi said in a
television address. "Is one year enough to solve the problems of
60 years? That's impossible... We must give the man a chance and help
him. Everyone must cooperate."
The
United States and the European Union have urged Mursi to share power
with the opposition, saying only a national consensus can help Egypt
overcome a severe economic crisis and build democratic institutions.
Mursi
and his Brotherhood supporters have so far rebuffed such pressure,
arguing that he has democratic legitimacy and the opposition is
merely seeking to achieve on the streets what it failed to secure at
the ballot box.
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