Associated Press
Egypt's president praises police despite criticism
Sunday, March 17, 2013
Egypt's president praises police despite criticism
Sunday, March 17, 2013
AP - CAIRO: President
Mohammed Morsi addressed riot police at one of their camps near Cairo
before joining them in weekly Friday prayers in a show of solidarity with the
force.
The
riot police, known as Central Security, have been at the forefront of deadly
clashes with protesters the past two years since the 18-day uprising that
toppled autocrat Hosni Mubarak in February
2011. Hundreds of protesters have been killed over that period, and rights
groups accuse the police of using snipers and lethal force. Policemen also have
been killed and have suffered serious injuries.
Over
the past weeks, thousands of officers and low-ranking policemen staged protests
outside police stations and refused to work. Some accuse the Muslim Brotherhood, from which Morsi hails, of
trying to control the force.
The Brotherhood denies the claims. Others demand
higher wages, better working conditions, greater firepower and stronger
immunity from prosecution for carrying out their duties. Many are demanding the
resignation of Interior Minister Mohammed Ibrahim, head of the security forces.
With
the interior minister and riot police commander standing beside him, Morsi
praised the police for keeping security.
"This
country loves you, hugs you and protects you, and always expects from you
courage and sacrifice," he said.
He seemed
to laud them for a role in the uprising against Mubarak, which began on Jan.
25, 2011 — and which the police tried to crush. A government report obtained
this week by The Associated Press concluded that police were behind the deaths
of nearly 900 protesters during the 18-day uprising.
The
police "were at the heart" of Jan. 25 revolution, Morsi said in his
speech, after praising them for being "at the heart" of earlier
Egyptian victories.
"Almighty
God willed that Jan. 25 also be Police Day, a day of remembering the sacrifices
of the police."
The
2011 revolution was sparked in large part by outrage over abuses and torture by
the police, which under Mubarak targeted opponents including the Muslim
Brotherhood.
The uprising began when anti-torture activists called an
anti-police protest coinciding with Police Day, a public holiday commemorating
the security forces. When huge crowds joined the rallies and turned them into
anti-Mubarak protests, police cracked down, sparking days of bloody fighting.
The Brotherhood joined the revolt.
In
his speech, Morsi warned the police against divisions.
"Be
aware, as I know you are, against breaking ranks or else our enemy will break
us all," Morsi said. "Our enemy outside the country is happy when we
are divided."
Rights
activists on Facebook denounced Morsi's speech and questioned his suggestion
that police were at the heart of the uprising.
"Instead
of this talk that turns the facts upside down in an attempt to reach out to
riot police, should it not be a priority first of the president to put forth a
plan to repair the relationship between police and the people?" asked one
group dedicated to the case of Khaled Said, a young man tortured to death by
police in 2010. Said's death was a rallying cry in the anti-Mubarak protests.
Morsi
acknowledged changes that have swept Egypt since the revolution, saying that
his June 30 election as the country's first freely elected and first civilian
president was a historical turning point for the police force.
In
the past two years, around 100 policemen have been tried in cases related to
the killing of protesters with almost all ending in acquittals.
Reform
of the police is among protesters' top demands.
In
the restive Suez Canal city of Port Said, thousands of residents rallied
against Morsi on Friday. They also demanded retribution for the killing of
around 45 people in clashes with police there this year.
The
protest came a day after Morsi delivered a televised message to the people of
Port Said, promising investigations that would uncover perpetrators of the
recent unrest there.
Last
week, protesters in the city torched security headquarters there, forcing the
police to withdraw from the streets. The army, which took over security of the
city, was enthusiastically welcomed.
That
sentiment was echoed in Cairo, where several hundred people rallied on Friday
in support of bringing back military rule and ousting Morsi.
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