Saskatoon StarPhoenix

PALACE UNDER SIEGE

- MATTHEW FISHER

The Egyptian army seals off the presidenti­al palace after fierce clashes with opponents of the Islamist leader.

CAIRO — With Egypt still in a state of shock and despair over political violence Wednesday night that left at least six dead and 700 injured, Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi delivered a nationally televised speech late Thursday that was as defiant as it was conciliato­ry.

Morsi agreed to “have a dialogue” on Saturday with secular opponents who have demanded that he postpone or change the wording of a referendum on a new constituti­on that is to be voted on Dec. 15.

However, the president gave no indication that he would water down the draft constituti­on, which has Islamic references that the opposition want purged, or to cancel or delay a vote on the proposal. Nor would he repeal a presidenti­al decree he issued on Nov. 22 that granted him what his opponents have called dictatoria­l powers.

Throughout his 35-minute speech Morsi sternly criticized the secular opposition for ignoring the will of the electorate, which elected his Muslim Brotherhoo­d movement earlier this year. Moreover, the president accused some of his rivals of being terrorists and said they had tried to seize power through violence and had taken “filthy money to destroy the country.”

Morsi began his address by stating that he had “a painful heart (filled) with sadness over the lives we have lost and the spilling of blood … I call on all Egyptian people who wish stability to renounce violence and not allow anyone to exercise

“I CALL ON ALL EGYPTIAN PEOPLE WHO WISH STABILITY TO RENOUNCE VIOLENCE AND NOT ALLOW ANYONE TO EXERCISE VIOLENCE.”

MOHAMMED MORSI

violence.”

A good measure of how the speech was received, and whether it will lead to more violence, will come after Friday prayers. It is at this time that both factions usually stage their biggest rallies.

However, preliminar­y indication­s after Morsi spoke were that the modest concession­s he made would not be nearly enough to satisfy the newly united and increasing­ly emboldened secularist­s — a disparate group made up of leftists, liberals, Christians and some supporters of the military regimes that until last year had ruled Egypt for more than half a century.

“Leave! Leave! Leave!” several thousand of Morsi’s opponents shouted after the speech as they stood in the dark outside the presidenti­al palace beside a cordon of barbed wire behind which tanks and armoured personnel carriers had been wheeled into position earlier in the day to stand guard.

It was at that spot and in nearby streets that supporters of the Brotherhoo­d and secularist­s fought for hours overnight Wednesday as security forces mostly stood aside.

The carnage in Heliopolis, a usually serene upper-class district near the airport, was by far the worst to hit Egypt since disgraced former president Hosni Mubarak was toppled 21 months ago in one of the seminal events of the Arab Spring.

The fallout from the fighting continued Thursday with the resignatio­n of the head of state television and another senior official. This brought to eight the number of close advisers to Morsi who have quit in disgust in the past week over the bloodshed and difference­s with the president over his plan to make Islam a central part of Egyptian life.

Morsi was believed to be under tremendous pressure from Islamist hardliners to not grant any concession­s and from Islamist moderates who wanted him to soften his stance.

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 ?? The Associated Press ?? An Egyptian army officer detains a man who was attacked by protesters gathering near the
presidenti­al palace in Cairo on Thursday.
The Associated Press An Egyptian army officer detains a man who was attacked by protesters gathering near the presidenti­al palace in Cairo on Thursday.

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