CAIRO — Egyptian security forces moved on Wednesday to clear two camps in Cairo occupied by supporters of the ousted president, Mohamed Morsi, deploying armored vehicles, bulldozers, tear gas, snipers and helicopters in a sustained and bloody operation that seemed to surprise some protesters with its ferocity.
Witnesses spoke of gunfire from shotguns and automatic rifles as white
clouds of tear gas offset plumes of black smoke from burning tires in
violence that deepened an already profound gulf in Egyptian society.
Protesters arrived at field hospitals with gunshot wounds to the neck
and chest. At one location, soldiers were seen firing on a lone
protester lobbing rocks from a rooftop. There were reports of scores of
fatalities, including several police officers. Many people were
arrested, including leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood, news reports
said.
Amid the confusion, there were wildly divergent tallies of the death
toll. The Muslim Brotherhood called the operation a “massacre” and put
the number of dead in the hundreds, a figure that was not immediately
borne out by accounts from reporters visiting morgues. But the toll
nonetheless seemed to climb rapidly. At one makeshift morgue run by
pro-Morsi supporters, the number of dead bodies rose from 3 to 12 in a
matter of minutes. By early afternoon, estimates of the number of dead,
as chronicled in news reports, ranged from 56 to 124.
Sky News said one of its veteran cameramen, Mick Deane, was killed. The
circumstances were not clear. Mohamed el-Beltagy, a prominent member of
the Muslim Brotherhood, said his 17-year-old daughter was also among the
dead.
Hours after the operation began, the authorities said they had cleared the smaller of two encampments at Nahda Square near
Cairo University. But protesters at the larger camp around the Rabaa
al-Adawiya mosque in the northeastern suburb of Nasr City remained
defiant but seemed to be under siege by vastly superior forces seeking
to uproot them.
Pro-Morsi demonstrators from outside the larger camp, meanwhile, clashed
with the police on its approaches, braving waves of tear gas to
barricade streets. Some protesters prepared gasoline bombs and broke
paving stones to hurl at their adversaries as the confrontation
unfolded.
The clashes illuminated the deepening fissures in Egypt between an
Islamist movement sustained by the Muslim Brotherhood in support of Mr.
Morsi and secular forces who cast the military as protectors. The
operation also threatened to reinforce regional tensions with Turkey,
whose Islamist-backed government opposed the overthrow of Mr. Morsi. The
“armed intervention on civilians, on people demonstrating” was
“completely unacceptable,” in the words of President Abdullah Gul.
News agencies reported clashes between civilian supporters and foes of
Mr. Morsi in other parts of Cairo. An Egyptian human rights group, the
Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights, said the crackdown had spurred
counterattacks by Muslim Brotherhood supporters against Coptic Christian
churches in Minya and Sohag, south of Cairo, apparently reflecting a
perception among Islamists that the Coptic minority had supported the
military’s action in ousting Mr. Morsi in early July.
As demonstrations spread to other cities on Wednesday, television
footage from the Mediterranean city of Alexandria and Aswan in the south
showed thousands of Morsi supporters taking to the streets to protest
the military action in Cairo. The authorities were reported to have
suspended rail services in and out of Cairo to prevent pro-Morsi
demonstrators from regrouping or summoning reinforcements.
The coordinated action against the Morsi supporters, which had been
expected for days, began around 7 a.m. local time. The protesters are
seeking the reinstatement of Mr. Morsi, who became Egypt’s first
democratically elected president in 2012 and was deposed by the military
six weeks ago. In removing Mr. Morsi, the military also suspended the
Constitution and installed an interim government presided over by a
senior jurist.
A statement from the interim government praised the security forces for
showing what it called self-restraint and blaming leaders of the Muslim
Brotherhood for inciting violence. “The government holds these leaders
fully responsible for any spilled blood, and for all the rioting and
violence going on,” the statement said, according to Reuters.
The interim authorities also pledged to pursue a military-based
political blueprint for the country’s future in “a way that strives not
to exclude any party from participation.”
The statement followed hours of clashes after army bulldozers moved in to dismantle the defenses set up by protesters.
Images on Al Jazeera television showed a car ablaze and protesters being
treated for bloody injuries. Protesters’ tents appeared to have been
razed, and a pillar of black smoke rose above palm trees in one of the
areas. The footage showed what appeared to be a gunman firing from a
rooftop, but the shooter’s identity was not immediately clear.
At Nahda Square, black-uniformed police wearing gas masks and helmets
dragged and carried away protesters, the footage showed. At least one of
the protesters showed no sign of life as his limp body was loaded into
an ambulance. The police seemed to be rounding up protesters in groups
as they fled the barrages of tear gas. The footage also showed smoke
from burning tires.
State television broadcast images of what it said was a protester firing on security forces with an assault rifle.
An Associated Press television video journalist at the larger of the
camps at Nasr City said he heard women screaming as a cloud of white
smoke hung over the site in eastern Cairo.
Mohamed Soltan, a representative of protesters there, told Al Jazeera
that a cameraman working with the protesters had been shot and killed by
a sniper while filming on a stage. There was no official confirmation
of the shooting.
According to a recent visitor, the camp in Nasr City was always likely
to present the authorities with a greater challenge. Tens of thousands
of people have built a well-equipped community there with electricity,
Internet access, a hospital, communal kitchens, latrines and showers.
Though dozens of people have been killed by the police and the military
since the sit-ins began, analysts said, the crackdowns on the protesters
seemed to have reinforced their conviction to stay.
Mr. Morsi is being held at an undisclosed location. The military
authorities have taken steps toward his criminal prosecution on charges
relating to his activities during the revolution that ousted his
predecessor, Hosni Mubarak.
While Egyptians broadly consider Mr. Mubarak’s autocracy to have been
fundamentally illegitimate, Mr. Morsi is now under investigation for his
own escape from political imprisonment and his work in the Islamist
political opposition that helped to topple Mr. Mubarak in 2011.
---- David D. Kirkpatrick reported from Cairo and Alan Cowell from London. Kareem Fahim contributed reporting from Cairo.
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