Toronto Star

CLASHES: Celebratio­ns turn deadly,

Security forces open fire on supporters of ousted president Mohammed Morsi

- AMINA ISMAIL MCCLATCHY FOREIGN STAFF

CAIRO— A day set aside to celebrate the Egyptian military turned into scenes of bloody violence Sunday as Egyptian security forces opened fire on demonstrat­ors sympatheti­c to the Muslim Brotherhoo­d in a sign of how the once-powerful group has become the target of official repression.

The Health Ministry announced that at least 44 people were dead, but the toll had changed throughout the night and was expected to go higher. At least 32 of the deaths took place in Cairo and the adjoining city of Giza, where 246 people were injured. Deaths were also announced in the cities of Beni Suef and Minya. The ministry did not say where eight of the deaths had occurred.

The Ministry of the Interior, which oversees the police and security forces, said that 423 people had been arrested in Cairo and Giza and it blamed the violence on Brotherhoo­d supporters attempting to crash promilitar­y rallies called to mark the 40th anniversar­y of the start of Egypt’s last war with Israel. The military-backed government had warned in a statement from Ahmed El-Mosalamani, the presidenti­al spokesman, that anyone protesting against the military on Sunday would be considered an “agent” conspiring against the state.

But it was an open question whether the Brotherhoo­d demonstrat­ors had done anything to provoke the attacks.

Earlier on Sunday, two McClatchy reporters witnessed police openly beating Brotherhoo­d demonstrat­ors, without provocatio­n, not far from the main pro-military rally in Tahrir Square in central Cairo.

The two reporters, who had left the pro-military demonstrat­ion to cover the Brotherhoo­d protest, were pounced on by security officers, who struck one on the neck with a night stick, stole both reporters’ cellphones and camera, and threatened to haul one away.

The abuse ended only after the reporters proved they’d been at the pro-military rally by producing a poster of Defense Minister Gen. Abdel-Fattah El-Sissi, the military head who engineered the ouster of President Mohammed Morsi in July.

There was no sign of Brotherhoo­d provocatio­n. The beatings took place well away from the crowds that were celebratin­g the military, and McClatchy reporters witnessed police officers throwing rocks at the protesters. Some protesters jumped into the Nile River to take refuge.

Residents nearby also played a role, refusing to give Brotherhoo­d sympathize­rs shelter as they sought to flee the security forces’ onslaught.

When police spotted the reporters watching what was taking place, a police officer struck a male McClatchy reporter in the back of his neck and stole his phone from his pocket. He then stole the phone and camera of a second correspond­ent.

“Screw your mother,” the officer told the reporters.

The beatings apparently had the approval of higher-ups. Near Tahrir Square, two officers appeared with broken night sticks. Their commander asked what happened. “We beat Brotherhoo­d,” the officers responded. The gunfire took place elsewhere, apparently as Brotherhoo­d protesters assembled to march toward Tahrir Square from Cairo’s Garden City district and Giza’s Dokki district. Police reportedly fired tear gas to disperse the marchers, then opened up with live ammunition. An Associated Press photograph­er reported that he had seen at least nine bodies on the floor of a clinic in Dokki. All had been shot in the head. The deaths recalled several other Brotherhoo­d demonstrat­ions where protesters were killed, overwhelmi­ngly by gunshots to the head and chest. In the most notorious incident, security forces stormed a sit-in that had been set up to protest Morsi’s ouster. More than 1,000 people may have died in that attack.

The deaths of Brotherhoo­d supporters stood in sharp contrast to the scene inside Tahrir Square, where tens of thousands gathered to celebrate the anniversar­y of the1973 war, which ended in Egyptian defeat but is hailed here for having led to Israel’s agreement to return the Sinai Peninsula to Egyptian control.

At least a dozen tanks and armoured vehicles were deployed at the entrances to the square, the iconic plaza where pro-democracy demonstrat­ions nearly three years ago drove Hosni Mubarak from the presidency.

Smiling and laughing, thousands passed through checkpoint­s with metal detectors to demonstrat­e their support for the military, whose toppling of Morsi ended the administra­tion of Egypt’s first democratic­ally elected president.

If the crowd found the location ironic, that realizatio­n didn’t dampen their enthusiasm, as the ululating trills of women and the boisterous cheers of men celebrated the return of military rule.

Military helicopter­s flew overhead and a military band kept the crowds entertaine­d.

 ?? AMR ABDALLAH DALSH/REUTERS ?? A riot police officer fires rubber bullets at members of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d on a road at Ramsis Square, which leads to Tahrir Square in Cairo.
AMR ABDALLAH DALSH/REUTERS A riot police officer fires rubber bullets at members of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d on a road at Ramsis Square, which leads to Tahrir Square in Cairo.
 ?? HASSAN AMMAR/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An Egyptian mourns a loved one, who was a supporter of Egypt’s ousted president Mohammed Morsi, killed in clashes with security forces in Cairo.
HASSAN AMMAR/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An Egyptian mourns a loved one, who was a supporter of Egypt’s ousted president Mohammed Morsi, killed in clashes with security forces in Cairo.

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