September 06, 2013 10:35 AM (Last updated: September 06, 2013 07:26 PM)
THE DAILY STAR
Egyptian soldiers sit on top of an armoured personnel carrier (APC) as they are deployed in the streets of the Sidi Gaber neighbourhood of Egypt's northern coastal city of Alexandria during clashes between pro- and anti-supporters of the Muslim Brotherhood and Egypt's ousted president Mohamed Morsi on September 6, 2013. AFP PHOTO / STR
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(The Daily Star :: Lebanon News :: http://www.dailystar.com.lb)
THE DAILY STAR
ALEXANDRIA/CAIRO: Two people were killed in skirmishes as supporters of deposed president Mohamed Morsi thronged Egypt's cities and towns on Friday for the third time in eight days, trying to rattle an army-backed government bent on crushing his Muslim Brotherhood.
But the authorities, who have killed hundreds of Morsi supporters and arrested most of its top leaders, pressed on with a campaign to neutralise Egypt's biggest political movement with a decision to clip its legal status.
Far from returning to normality after the army's overthrow of Morsi on July 3 following mass protests, the Arab world's most populous nation has remained on edge in fear of violence.
That fear was reinforced on Thursday when Interior Minister Mohamed Ibrahim survived a presumed suicide car bomb targeting his convoy, the culmination of a series of militant attacks.
Although it has yet to assign blame for that attack, the interim government has accused Brotherhood leaders of inciting violence, and portrayed the crackdown on the movement as a fight against terrorism - a view that many Egyptians endorse.
The new establishment has unveiled plans to revise the constitution to remove some Islamist-inspired amendments pushed through by Morsi, as well as lifting a ban on Mubarak-era officials returning to public office, before holding parliamentary and presidential elections early next year.
Friday's violence between Morsi supporters and either security forces or other supporters of the crackdown appeared more widespread than on either of the last two protest days.
A Reuters witness saw three men with swords set upon one of thousands of pro-Morsi protesters marching through Egypt's second city, Alexandria. Medical sources said one person involved in that protest was killed.
Another Morsi supporter was seen with birdshot wounds to the face, and Brotherhood supporters were seen punching and kicking a man they presumed to be hostile to them, the witness said.
State television showed footage of soldiers armed with assault rifles searching buildings in Alexandria, saying they were looking for gunmen who had opened fire on them.
One Morsi supporter was killed in Kafr el-Bateekh in Damietta province in clashes with government supporters where rocks, sticks and birdshot were used, according to witnesses and a medical official.
In both Tanta in the Nile Delta and the southern city of Assiut, security forces used tear gas.
About 2,000 people marched in the Cairo district of Nasr City and 3,000 people in the port city of Suez.
There were also marches in Fayoum, three other cities in Assiut governorate and in eight cities in Minya governorate.
In the Delta city of Damanhour, hundreds took to the streets in a pro-government march, chanting "No to terrorism" and "Army, police and people are one hand".
As with previous days of protest, the marches received scant coverage on tightly-controlled state television channels and privately-owned Egyptian media hostile to the Brotherhood.
Islamist-run stations were shut down after Morsi was deposed, leaving it to Al Jazeera's Egyptian channel, banned but still transmitting from its base in Qatar, to show live footage of Friday's marches.
Separately, authorities announced they would within days dissolve a non-governmental organisation registered by the Muslim Brotherhood in March
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Read more: http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Middle-East/2013/Sep-06/230228-egypt-to-dissolve-muslim-brotherhood-ngo-state-run-paper.ashx#ixzz2e8JHgRgk
(The Daily Star :: Lebanon News :: http://www.dailystar.com.lb)