Ongoing protests in Egypt claim six lives
Muslim Brotherhood supporters clash with security forces before referendum this month
CAIRO — Riot police clashed with supporters of Egypt’s former Islamist president across the country on Friday, leaving six dead as the Muslim Brotherhood renewed calls to protest before a key referendum this month.
Fighting spread through heavily populated residential areas in several cities and provinces, including Cairo, Giza, Ismailia and Alexandria, as hundreds of Brotherhood members and their supporters threw rocks at security forces, who responded with water cannons and tear gas.
Black smoke hung in the air as protesters burnt tires and hurled Molotov cocktails and fireworks at black-clad security forces. A number of police vehicles were set on fire and main roads blocked by protesters.
The Health Ministry said six people, including three in Cairo, were killed and more than 40 injured in the protests. A Brotherhood-led alliance said on its Facebook page that the death toll had reached 19.
The Interior Ministry said in a statement that 122 Brotherhood protesters were arrested carrying homemade grenades and Molotov cocktails.
Such scenes have been recurrent since the military ousted Mohamed Morsi in a July 3 coup after millions of anti-Islamist protesters demonstrated to demand his resignation.
The numbers of those hitting the street in support of the Brotherhood — Egypt’s most organized political group — have dwindled dramatically over the past months after the military-backed interim government launched a crackdown. Hundreds were killed when authorities broke up protest camps, thousands of Brotherhood members have been arrested and scores were sent to trial.
The government has also sought to drain the group’s resources, ordering last week the seizure of assets of hundreds of non-governmental groups on suspicions of links to the Brotherhood. Hundreds of the group’s leaders and businessmen have also had assets seized.
Over the past months the group changed tactics, relying more on women and student supporters to lead protests ahead of two main events: the second session of Morsi’s trial on Jan. 8 on charges of killing protesters, and the upcoming referendum on a new constitution drafted by a secular-leaning assembly on Jan. 14 and 15.
In the latest blow to the Brotherhood, the government designated it a terrorist organization and accused it of having ties to a known al-Qaida-inspired group called the Champions of Jerusalem. It has claimed responsibility for many attacks, including a deadly Dec. 24 bombing of a security headquarters in a Nile Delta city.
The interim government considers the referendum a milestone in a transition plan it laid out ahead of Morsi’s ouster, which envisions presidential and parliamentarian elections in the coming months. The draft charter is an amended version of the 2012 constitution drawn up by an Islamist-dominated panel under Morsi, which was suspended during the coup.