Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Egypt declares state of emergency. Announcement comes amid security crackdown on pro-Morsi protesters which left at least 95 people dead nationwide.



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A state of emergency has been declared across Egypt, according to a presidential statement announced on state television.
The state of emergency will begin at 4pm local time (14:00 GMT) and will last for a month, the statement said on Wednesday afternoon.
The exceptional measures came as "the security and order of the nation face danger due to deliberate sabotage, and attacks on public and private buildings and the loss of life by extremist groups," the presidency said.

Interim president Adly Mansour "has tasked the armed forces, in cooperation with the police, to take all necessary measures to maintain security and order and to protect public and private property and the lives of citizens."
The announcement came amid a deadly crackdown by security forces on two Cairo protest camps set up by supporters of Egypt's ousted president Mohamed Morsi.
Conflicting reports have emerged over the number of people killed on Wednesday.
The Health Ministry said 95 people were killed in clashes that happened nationwide, with another 974 injured.

However, some members of Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood said the death toll was as high as 2,200, with about 10,000 injured.
Al Jazeera could not independently verify the Brotherhood's figure.
Al Jazeera's Sherine Tadros, reporting from Cairo, said the military has now been given "a mandate by cabinet to play an active role in the crackdown, if the situation escalates, and we have seen that the situation has escalated."
"It is a very worrying situation, and the state of emergency only serves to highlight the very precarious situation."
The Interior Ministry said 543 pro-Morsi supporters were arrested nationwide, in incidents related to dispersing the sit-ins of Rabaa and Nahda. The arrests were made for possession of arms including automatic weapons, and large amounts of ammunition.

Journalists killed
Ammar Beltagi, the son of Mohammad Beltagi, the head of the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice party, told Al Jazeera his 17-year-old sister, Asmaa, was shot and killed in the Rabaa al-Adawiya sit-in in Nasr City.
Two journalists were also killed while covering the violence. Mick Deane, a cameraman for the UK-based Sky News channel, and Habiba Abd Elaziz, a reporter for the UAE-based Xpress newspaper, died from gunshot wounds.
Live footage from Cairo on Wednesday morning showed smoke engulfing Nahda Square, the smaller of the two sit-ins based in Giza, amid reports of tear gas and birdshots being used on supporters of the deposed president.
By mid-morning, the Interior Ministry said security forces had "total control" over Nahda Square, and that "police forces had managed to remove most of the tents" in the area. Security forces had blocked all access to the protest camp.
In an afternoon press conference, the cabinet media adviser thanked the security forces for "exercising self-control and high-level professionalism in dispersing the sit-ins," and held the Muslim Brotherhood responsible for "escalation and violence".
Witnesses said that after firing tear gas into the Rabaa al-Adawiya sit-in, pandemonium struck among the thousands of protesters who had set up camp there soon after Morsi was ousted by the army on July 3.

Automatic fire
Protesters have camped in Cairo demanding the reinstatement of Morsi, who was country's first democratically elected president and his Freedom and Justice Party was the largest political group in the now dissolved parliament.
Clashes quickly erupted between protesters and security forces on one side of the camp, with automatic fire reverberating across the square. It was not immediately clear who was shooting.

Television footage showed the injured being carried to a makeshift medical centre as well as police dragging away protesters, who had defied numerous ultimatums by the army-installed authorities to end their demonstrations.
Police barred journalists not already in the camp from entering.
In response to the security operation, the Muslim Brotherhood urged Egyptians to take to the streets across the country to "stop a massacre".
Al Jazeera's D. Parvaz, reporting from a makeshift hospital near the Rabaa sit-in, said that the people in the area will not be deterred. "No one is willing to give up, and they've said that the gunshots are not going to scare them".
She said the hospital, which has been set up in the entrance of a local mosque, has been receiving a steady stream of wounded people.
“They are bringing in a steady stream of gunshot victims, of all ages, with wounds everywhere."
“At least four people have died from their wounds in the period I’ve been here.”
 http://www.aljazeera.com
14/8/13 
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8 comments :

  1. EU foreign policy chief Ashton condemns Egypt violence...

    European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton strongly condemned violence in Egypt that claimed scores of lives on Wednesday and urged the interim government to end a state of emergency as soon as possible.

    "I strongly condemn the violence that has erupted in Cairo and throughout Egypt," Ashton said in a statement, adding that the violence left Egypt "heading into an uncertain future."

    "I call on the security forces to exercise utmost restraint and on the interim government to end the state of emergency as soon as possible, to allow the resumption of normal life," she said.
    http://www.jpost.com/Breaking-News/EU-foreign-policy-chief-Ashton-condemns-Egypt-violence-323089
    14/8/13

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  2. Ecuador recalls ambassador to Egypt after bloodshed in Cairo....

    QUITO - Ecuador recalled its ambassador to Egypt for consultations on Wednesday after Egyptian security forces crushed the protest camps of supporters of the deposed Islamist President Mohamed Morsi and shot nearly 200 of them dead.

    In a brief statement, Ecuador's Foreign Ministry said the Egyptian people had chosen Morsi as their constitutional leader.

    "Following the coup d'etat which toppled President Morsi in July of this year, Egyptian society has been wrapped up in a climate of civil protest and repression on the part of the de facto government," the statement said.

    Wednesday was the bloodiest day for decades in the Arab world's most populous nation. At least 235 people were killed, including at least 43 police, and 2,000 were wounded, a health official said, in clashes that spread beyond Cairo to towns and cities around the country.
    http://www.jpost.com/Breaking-News/Ecuador-recalls-ambassador-to-Egypt-after-bloodshed-in-Cairo-323099
    15/8/13

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  3. Egypt's interim PM defends deadly crackdown...

    Hazem el-Beblawi says decision to storm pro-Morsi protest camps in Cairo "was not easy", as death toll climbs to 281.

    Egypt's army-backed interim prime minister has defended the government's decision to order the crushing of camps of supporters of deposed President Mohamed Morsi, saying the authorities had no choice but to act.
    In a televised statement late on Wednesday, Hazem el-Beblawi said the decision to break up the protests "was not easy" and came only after the government had given mediation efforts a chance.

    "We found that matters had reached a point that no self respecting state could accept," he said, citing what he describes as "the spread of anarchy and attacks on hospitals and police stations".

    The streets of Egypt's second city Alexandria were almost deserted on Wednesday night as security forces enforced a curfew....http://www.aljazeera.com/news/middleeast/2013/08/2013814224835732803.html
    15/8/13

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  4. Report: More than 250 bodies at Cairo mosque...

    CAIRO - The bodies of more than 250 people killed in Egypt's political violence are being held at a mosque in northeast Cairo, Al Jazeera's Egypt news channel reported on Thursday, showing footage of rows of corpses in white shrouds.

    The Health Ministry's death toll stands at 421, based on bodies that had been transported to hospitals and morgues.

    The violence erupted on Wednesday when security forces broke up the Cairo protest camps of supporters of deposed president Mohamed Morsi.
    http://www.jpost.com/Breaking-News/Report-More-than-250-bodies-at-Cairo-mosque-323149
    15/8/13

    ReplyDelete
  5. Hundreds of Morsi supporters torch govt building in Giza after brutal crackdown...

    Hundreds of Morsi supporters have stormed a government building in Giza and set it alight, reports state TV. This comes after Wednesday’s brutal crackdown on Muslim Brotherhood loyalists in which over 500 people died.

    The Giza incident was confirmed by interior ministry sources, who told Al Jazeera that protesters had been flinging Molotov cocktails at the building and firing live ammunition. However, government employees managed to evacuate the main colonial-style vialla building before it fell under siege. ...http://rt.com/news/egypt-crackdown-brotherhood-protest-530/
    15/8/13

    ReplyDelete
  6. Brotherhood says it will bring down Egypt's "military coup" peacefully...

    15 August 2013 /REUTERS, CAIRO
    Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood said on Thursday it would bring down the "military coup" but stressed it remained committed to a peaceful struggle, despite the heavy loss of life when government forces broke up its protest camps.

    The crackdown on Wednesday defied Western appeals for restraint and a peaceful, negotiated settlement to Egypt's political crisis following the military's removal of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi last month, prompting international statements of dismay and condemnation.

    "We will always be non-violent and peaceful. We remain strong, defiant and resolved," Brotherhood spokesman Gehad El-Haddad wrote on his Twitter feed. "We will push (forward) until we bring down this military coup," he added.

    Security forces struggled to clamp a lid on Egypt after the worst nationwide bloodshed in decades, although a curfew largely held in Cairo overnight.....http://www.todayszaman.com//news-323545-brotherhood-says-it-will-bring-down-egypts-military-coup-peacefully.html
    15/8/13

    ReplyDelete
  7. Égypte : l'état d'urgence prolongé de deux mois...

    L'état d'urgence sera prolongé de deux mois en Egypte, a annoncé le gouvernement égyptien, jeudi 12 septembre.

    L'état d'urgence avait été instauré le 14 août, le jour même où l'armée avait lancé avec la police l'assaut sur deux rassemblements des pro-Morsi, provoquant la mort de centaines de manifestants. En cinq jours, au moins 928 civils avaient été tués dans la répression des sit-in et manifestations organisés par les Frères musulmans. Ces derniers protestaient contre la destitution du président islamiste Mohamed Morsi par l'armée.

    VAGUES D'ATTENTATS

    Le 5 septembre, une attaque visait le convoi du ministre de l'intérieur, Mohammed Ibrahim, alors qu'il circulait dans les rues du Caire. Mohammed Ibrahim avait survécu malgré la violence de l'explosion et était ensuite apparu à la télévision pour dénoncer une "lâche tentative" d'assassinat.......http://www.lemonde.fr/afrique/article/2013/09/12/egypte-l-etat-d-urgence-prolonge-de-deux-mois_3476791_3212.html#xtor=RSS-3208
    12/9/13

    ReplyDelete
  8. Egypt state TV: Hamas is training Egyptian Islamists...

    CAIRO - The Hamas Islamist group ruling Gaza has been teaching Egyptian Islamists how to plant bombs in cars, Egyptian state television said on Thursday.

    Hamas also gave 400 landmines to Egyptian militant groups, said the television. Hamas is an offshoot of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood. The Brotherhood's Mohamed Morsi was overthrown as Egyptian president by the military in July following mass protests.
    http://www.jpost.com/Breaking-News/Egypt-state-TV-Hamas-is-training-Egyptian-Islamists-326008
    12/9/13

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