Three army officers and three protesters were killed in Egypt on
Friday as Islamist plans for massive anti-government rallies fell apart
in the face of a nationwide military deployment.
Military sources
said gunmen in a license plate-less vehicle shot and killed a brigadier
general and injured two soldiers in Cairo on Friday, AFP reported. Officials told the Associated Press two other officers had also been killed.
Three people were also reportedly killed
in protests in the eastern Cairo district of Matareya, though the
deaths could not be independently confirmed. By mid-afternoon, the
demonstrations largely remained restricted to outlying neighborhoods,
while central Cairo was quiet, though tense, amid a heavy military and police presence.
An
ultraconservative Salafi group had called for an uprising on Friday to
topple the government of President Abdel-Fattah el-Sisi, the former
military chief who let the ouster of elected Islamist President Mohamed
Morsi in July 2013. The Islamist call for protests, articulated in a video
released on YouTube, accused the current government of betraying
Egypt's Muslim "identity." Since Morsi's removal, Egypt's security
forces have killed more than a thousand people and detained thousands of
others in a crackdown on Islamists and other political opponents.
In
the northern port city of Alexandria, thousands of protesters took to
the streets, many of them women, holding up four fingers in the symbol
of the Rabaa massacre of August 2013, when security forces killed at
least 800 Muslim Brotherhood supporters protesting the overthrow of
their president Mohamed Morsi. Some reportedly chanted: "Sisi, you are
Mubarak's dog. Execution is waiting for you," referring to the former
general and now president Abdelfatteh el-Sisi who led the coup.
The Salafi Front spearheaded the planned action, which it called the
"Muslim Youth Uprising," and said protesters should brandish Qu'rans.
The Islamist Anti Coup Alliance coalition urged Egyptians
to join "a thundering week of revolutionary protests" in a statement,
but warned its supporters not to get involved in violent clashes with
security forces. Adding to the sense of anxiety, a court is expected on
Saturday to issue a verdict in a re-trail of former President Hosni
Mubarak on charges over the killings of more than 900 protesters.
But
it was the first major protests planned in months that worried
authorities, with parts of the city center on virtual military lockdown.
In the neighborhood of Aguza, soldiers in a tan army personnel carrier
trailed a convoy of military jeeps, sirens wailing, in a patrol along
the Nile corniche. A military helicopter thumped overhead.
In
Tahrir Square, ground zero of the 2011 uprising that ejected dictator
Mubarak, several dozen anti-Islamist protesters waved Egyptian flags and
held portraits of president Abdelfattah el-Sisi. Concertina wire
partially closed each entrance to the square, while uniformed soldiers
perched atop rows of APCs. One man wearing plainclothes and carrying a
submachine gun against his chest led one group of young men down a side
street.
"It's a festival!" said one man wearing glasses and a
leather jacket, smiling as he strode toward the crowd. Another man,
seated on the metal fence that rings the square muttered "The
Brotherhood, they'll kill them."
Moments later a convoy of
vehicles from the Central Security Forces, Egypt's riot police, rolled
through Tahrir, prompting more cheers from the crowd.
In a shift
from previous protests, the Islamists' rhetoric focused more on religion
and religious identity. In the past, the Muslim Brotherhood and its
allies stressed their demand for Morsi's reinstatement.
Nevertheless
Maha Azzam, head of opposition coalition the Egyptian Revolutionary
Council, told VICE News that other anti-government protesters might take
part too. "It was called for by a particular part of the opposition
that is Salafi and is strongly religious, but that doesn't mean that
that is the only part of the opposition. The call for Muslim youth to
come out to the streets is very much part of the same sort of protests
that have already been going on... so it doesn't mean that other groups
won't be joining."
Troops were deployed throughout the country
ahead of the demonstrations and the Interior Ministry threatened that
dissent would be met with "lethal force." In a statement, the Interior
Ministry also announced that police arrested 224 people throughout the
country for shooting firearms, blocking roads, and other charges, while
authorities defused 10 improvised explosive devices.
Azzam said
that security forces could use the demonstrations as an excuse to hit
opposition groups hard and make it clear that any form of protest would
not be tolerated. However, she added that this would be a reflection of
official concerns. "The security situation is very precarious and the
regime is very uncertain of its own security, so will come out in huge
numbers to suppress protest," she said. "The huge security presence is
telling... it's not indicative of strength of the opposition, so much as
the weakness of the regime."
The coalition leader said that she
expected renewed calls for demonstrations to follow. Since Morsi's
ouster, security forces have cracked down hard on supporters of the
former president and his Muslim Brotherhood, killing hundreds and
arresting tens of thousands.
The Egyptian cabinet approved a new
terrorism bill on Wednesday with a wide ranging definition of "terrorist
entities" including anyone who occupies private or public buildings or
disrupts the work of authorities. Penalties had already been increased
for terrorist acts in an April penal code amendment. In February the
brotherhood were designated a terrorist organization.
Meanwhile, a
juvenile court in Alexandria sentenced 78 children aged 13-17 to
between two and five years in prison on Wednesday for being members of
the Muslim Brotherhood and taking part in unauthorized protests, local media said. The detainees have complained of a number of violations whilst in custody.
An
insurgency has raged in the Sinai peninsula since Morsi's ouster and
security chiefs have been rattled by an upswell in attacks on police
officers and troops that have killed scores in a matter of weeks. These
include an assault on an Egyptian army checkpoint in late October that
left 31 troops dead and prompted officials to declare a state of
emergency in several parts of the Sinai. This was followed earlier this
month by an unprecedented sea-borne attack on an Egyptian navy ship
conducting a training mission off the coast of northeastern Damietta.
Egypt's
most active extremist militant group, al-Qaeda-inspired Ansar Beit al
Maqdis — which roughly translates to "Partisans of the Holy House," a
reference to Jerusalem — claimed responsibility for the checkpoint
attack as well as a number of others. The group also pledged allegiance
to the Islamic State on November 10 and urged attacks on authorities.
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