Agence France-Presse
5 dead in Egypt as pro-Islamists mark Rabaa anniversary
August 14, 2014
Jay Desmukh
Cairo (AFP) - At least five people were killed in sporadic violence in Egypt on Thursday after Islamists called protests to mark the first anniversary of a police crackdown that cost the lives of hundreds of demonstrators.
5 dead in Egypt as pro-Islamists mark Rabaa anniversary
August 14, 2014
Jay Desmukh
Cairo (AFP) - At least five people were killed in sporadic violence in Egypt on Thursday after Islamists called protests to mark the first anniversary of a police crackdown that cost the lives of hundreds of demonstrators.
On August 14,
2013, after then army chief and now President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi had
removed Egypt's first freely elected Islamist president Mohamed Morsi,
police set upon thousands of Morsi supporters at protest camps in
Cairo's Rabaa al-Adawiya and Nahda squares, leaving hundreds of people
dead.
The assault was "one of
the largest killings of demonstrators in a single day in recent
history," the New York-based Human Rights Watch said in a report
released ahead of Thursday's anniversary.
In Rabaa al-Adawiya at least 817 people were killed, HRW said, calling for investigations into likely "crimes against humanity."
Official estimates say more than 700 people were killed at the two squares on that day.
On
Thursday, attempts by Morsi supporters to demonstrate were swiftly
suppressed, reflecting their dwindling ability to stage protests amid
violent repression that has left more than 1,400 people dead since
Morsi's overthrow in July 2013.
The pro-Morsi Anti-Coup Alliance had called for nationwide rallies under the slogan "We Demand Retribution."
Four people were killed by
gunshots across Cairo when Morsi supporters clashed with riot police and
civilian opponents, a security official said.
Earlier,
a policeman was gunned down in a southern Cairo suburb by unknown
assailants. The interior ministry blamed Morsi supporters for his death.
Police
fired tear gas during clashes with pro-Morsi demonstrators in three
neighbourhoods of the Mediterranean city of Alexandria and in the town
of Kerdasa, southwest of Cairo.
Similar trouble was reported in the Nile Delta province of Sharqiya.
At least 14 people were wounded and around 70 arrested nationwide, security officials and state news agency MENA said.
Security
forces were deployed around Cairo's main squares including Rabaa to
thwart any attempts by pro-Morsi groups to hold rallies.
'NO REGRETS'
In
a conference call on Tuesday, HRW executive director Kenneth Roth said
the Rabaa crackdown was a "widespread systematic attack on civilian
population."
He called for an
investigation into the roles played in the assault by Sisi, Interior
Minister Mohamed Irbrahim and Medhat Menshawy, who led the crackdown.
Hazem al-Beblawi, who was prime minister at that time, brushed off the HRW criticism.
"It was a sad decision yet necessary... I do not have the slightest doubt that what happened was right," Beblawi told AFP.
"No disproportionate force was used... it only took so long because of the vicious resistance (of the protesters)," he added.
The
crackdown was launched after thousands of pro-Morsi supporters refused
to end their sit-ins despite repeated warnings by the authorities.
Qatar-based
cleric Sheikh Yusef al-Qaradawi, who was born in Egypt and is seen as a
spiritual guide by supporters of Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood, called for
the prosecution of the "leaders of the military coup" for the
"premeditated massacre" of the protesters.
Qaradawi is himself wanted in Egypt and faces trial in absentia as part of the crackdown on Morsi's supporters.
Gas-rich
Qatar has also given refuge to a number of Brotherhood leaders who fled
Egypt after Morsi's overthrow and has faced persistent criticism from
the new authorities in Cairo.
Sisi
deposed Morsi after millions of people took to the streets demanding
the Islamist's resignation just one year into his rule.
They accused him of monopolising power and ruining an already dilapidated economy.
Sisi
replaced Morsi as president after securing a landslide victory in May
this year in an election in which he faced a single challenger and the
main opposition groups called a boycott.
*Photo courtesy of Middle East Monitor
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