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Egypt turmoil: Morsi supporters clash with police | Egypt turmoil: Morsi supporters clash with police |
(35 minutes later) | |
Hundreds of supporters of Egypt's ousted President Mohammed Morsi have clashed with security forces in Cairo. | Hundreds of supporters of Egypt's ousted President Mohammed Morsi have clashed with security forces in Cairo. |
Overnight, police used tear gas to drive back protesters, some hurling rocks, who temporarily blocked an arterial route through the capital. | |
The clashes came after a senior US envoy visiting Egypt said it had been given a "second chance" at democracy. | |
William Burns met interim leaders but was snubbed by rival groups, including Mr Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood. | |
Mr Morsi was ousted on 3 July in what many have said was a military coup. The army says it was fulfilling the demands of the people after mass anti-Morsi protests. | |
Monday's battles erupted after hundreds of angry protesters blocked the main 6 October bridge. | |
State media said at least 22 people were injured in clashes around the bridge and in nearby Ramses Square, which lasted into the early hours of Tuesday. | |
The area was later reopened. | |
'Get out, Sisi' | |
The latest clashes took place a week after more than 50 Morsi supporters were killed in fighting with troops outside the Republican Guard compound where the former president is believed to be being held. | |
The interim government has since announced its transition plan, under which a panel will be formed by next week to draw up amendments to the constitution and a timetable set for new elections. | |
But Morsi supporters are demanding his reinstatement and have been holding a round-the-clock vigil outside the Rabaa al-Adawiya mosque, in the east of the capital, and at Cairo University in Giza district. | |
Large crowds were again gathered there on Monday as Mr Burns, who is deputy secretary of state, visited. | |
"Get out, Sisi," some shouted, referring to the head of the armed forces, General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, who oversaw the overthrow of Mr Morsi. | "Get out, Sisi," some shouted, referring to the head of the armed forces, General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, who oversaw the overthrow of Mr Morsi. |
On Monday, Mr Burns met interim President Adly Mansour and Prime Minister Hazem al-Beblawi, as well as Gen al-Sisi. | |
He described the events of the last two weeks as a "second chance to realise the promise of the revolution" that ended the long, authoritarian presidency of Hosni Mubarak in 2011. | He described the events of the last two weeks as a "second chance to realise the promise of the revolution" that ended the long, authoritarian presidency of Hosni Mubarak in 2011. |
He called on the military to avoid "any politically motivated arrests", saying the US remained committed to an Egypt that was "stable, democratic, inclusive and tolerant". | He called on the military to avoid "any politically motivated arrests", saying the US remained committed to an Egypt that was "stable, democratic, inclusive and tolerant". |
But he insisted the US had "not come to lecture anyone. We will not try to impose our model on Egypt." | But he insisted the US had "not come to lecture anyone. We will not try to impose our model on Egypt." |
The envoy's comments come amid what correspondents say is an increasingly widespread antipathy towards the US among Egyptians on both sides of the political divide. | |
The US has stopped short of calling the army intervention a coup - doing so would trigger a legal stop of the some $1.5bn (£1bn) in the mostly military aid it sends to the country each year. | |
But is has called for Mr Morsi to be released. | |
Mr Burns said he planned to meet religious and civilian leaders, the heads of political parties and business figures during his two-day visit. | Mr Burns said he planned to meet religious and civilian leaders, the heads of political parties and business figures during his two-day visit. |
But both the ultra-conservative Salafi al-Nour party and the Tamarod anti-Morsi protest movement said they turned down invitations to meet Mr Burns, while the Muslim Brotherhood also said it had no plans to see him. | But both the ultra-conservative Salafi al-Nour party and the Tamarod anti-Morsi protest movement said they turned down invitations to meet Mr Burns, while the Muslim Brotherhood also said it had no plans to see him. |
"Such kind of visit doesn't mean anything for us because we believe that America supported this military coup," Dina Zakaria, a member of the Brotherhood and its political wing the Freedom and Justice Party, told the BBC. | |
Islam Hammam, a Tamarod organiser, said the movement had turned down the invitation to talks with Mr Burns "because the United States did not stand with the Egyptian people from the beginning." | |
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