Military
fire shots, tear gas at Cairo mosque filled with Islamist protesters
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LYu8irGfXjI
This extraordinary a full on gun battle is happening right now between security forces and someone in the el-fath mosque minaret
Earlier
in the day, soldiers peacefully entered the mosque, apparently to
negotiate with protesters. Some protesters subsequently managed to
secure a safe exit from the building. Hundreds of Morsi supporters
had sought refuge in the building since protests turned violent
Friday. The mosque was serving as a field hospital and morgue after
the crackdown.
A
Muslim cleric, Sheik Abdel-Hafiz el-Maslami, told AP that people were
afraid to exit the mosque from a fear of detention or the possibility
of being attacked by the crowd outside.
Security
forces fired bullets and tear gas at the scene of the Al-Fath mosque
in Cairo after an exchange of heavy gunfire outside spilled into the
building on Saturday. Hundreds of pro-Morsi protesters had barricaded
themselves inside overnight.
RT,
17 August,
2013
Egyptian
security unleashed a barrage of bullets after gunmen opened fire at
security from a second-story window at around 2 pm local time. One
lone gunman started shooting from one of the mosque’s minarets,
forcing the surrounding crowds to take cover. A small explosion was
heard by journalists present at the scene.
“Nobody
here is safe, they are shooting inside the mosque,” one
woman told Al Jazeera by telephone as the mayhem began. Loud firing
could be heard in the background.
Army soldiers react inside a room of
al-Fath mosque when supporters of deposed Egyptian President Mohamed
Mursi exchanged gunfire with security forces inside the mosque in
Cairo August 17, 2013.(Reuters / Muhammad Hamed)
Small
groups emerged from the mosque late Saturday morning. The head of the
Doctors’ Syndicate told Ahram Online that 1,500 protesters and 31
doctors had asked for a safe exit corridor early in the
morning.
“They demand a safe exit because they fear if they leave the mosque they will be arrested and humiliated. They want to go out in the presence of human rights representatives, media personnel and members of the Doctors Syndicate to make sure this will not happen,” medic Ahmed Hussein said.
“They demand a safe exit because they fear if they leave the mosque they will be arrested and humiliated. They want to go out in the presence of human rights representatives, media personnel and members of the Doctors Syndicate to make sure this will not happen,” medic Ahmed Hussein said.
The
reports of Muslim Brotherhood protestors shooting at the security
forces from the minaret of the Al-Fath mosque are false Dr. Saad Amer
from the Egyptian Forum in the UK, told RT, calling the army-backed
Egyptian government “a lying machine.”
“They
say that those people in the mosque climbed into that minaret.
However, to get on top of that you have to do that from outside. This
is the first point. They couldn’t get to the top of it from the
inside where they were,” he
said.
“Secondly,
there were some shooting from that towards the police or the
military, but there were no casualties from that side. And if you’re
shooting from that spot you’re bound to hit some targets,” he
added.
Earlier,
AFP reported that soldiers offered to evacuate women but insisted on
questioning men, which the protesters refused. “Thugs tried
to storm the mosque but the men barricaded the doors,” the
agency quoted one of the people inside the mosque as saying.
The
Egyptian Army posted a statement on
its Facebook page on Saturday, dismissing what it described as “lies
and false claims” by
Muslim Brotherhood supporters. The army said it had been providing a
safe exit corridor to people inside Cairo’s Al-Fath mosque, and
said some media agencies had “deliberately
falsified the facts.”
Bambuser / Fahmi2
Bambuser / Fahmi2
Screenshot from AP video
Screenshot from AP video
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