CAIRO (AP) --
Tens of thousands of protesters and Muslim Brotherhood supporters
rallied Friday throughout Egypt against a military coup and a bloody
security crackdown, though tanks and armored police vehicles barred them
from converging in major squares.
The
protests appeared smaller than the mass demonstrations seen in previous
weeks, despite a massive push by the Brotherhood for "decisive" rallies
across the country after Friday prayers.
The
largest protest in the capital, Cairo, had more than 10,000 protesters.
Thousands gathered in other cities, with other smaller protests drawing
hundreds, including many women and children.
Protesters
marched through the streets chanting slogans against the country's army
chief, Gen. Abdel-Fatah el-Sissi, who led the popularly backed July 3
coup that toppled President Mohammed Morsi, a longtime leader of the
Brotherhood.
"The people want the death of the
assassin!" the protesters yelled while waving the Egyptian flag and
holding up yellow posters with the outline of a hand showing four
fingers. Morsi supporters have used the symbol in online and street
campaigns to remember the sit-in protest around the Rabaah al-Adawiya
mosque, which in Arabic means fourth.
Security
forces cleared out that sit-in and another one two weeks ago in violent
raids that sparked several days of violence. More than 1,000 people,
most of them people opposed to Morsi's ouster, have been killed since.
The Interior Ministry says more than 100 policemen and soldiers have
also died in the violence.
Many of the
protesters Friday were not Brotherhood members. Some said they were only
seeking justice for relatives killed by security forces this month or
protesting the way in which Morsi, Egypt's first freely elected
president, was removed from power. Many waved the Egyptian flag and
carried pictures of Morsi.
"When it started,
it was only about the return of Morsi to power," protester Ahmed Osama
said. "Now it has gone past that. Blood has been shed."
While
largely peaceful, the protests drew some sporadic violence, as
residents angry with the Brotherhood confronted the group's supporters.
In
the Mediterranean city of Port Said, one person was killed in clashes,
security officials said. Another 22 residents were wounded by birdshot
allegedly fired by the protesters, the officials said. They spoke on
condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to
journalists.
Similar clashes took place in
other parts of the country, including in the Nile Delta city of Zagazig,
where the Brotherhood said a protester was shot dead. The group did not
elaborate. Health officials said 33 people had wounded by birdshot in
the fighting.
Security forces also fired tear
gas at protesters in Cairo, the Nile Delta city of Tanta and south of
Cairo in Assiut. Meanwhile, Egypt's state news agency said unidentified
gunmen in two cars opened fire on a police station in the upscale Cairo
neighborhood of Heliopolis, killing an officer and a civilian. The
drive-by attack early Friday wounded another officer, according to the
MENA agency.
The Interior Ministry, in charge
of police, said its forces had orders to use deadly force in defense of
public and private property if protests turned violent. Two Fridays ago
more than 10 police stations were attacked and government buildings
assaulted by protesters. Residents and police officers in civilian
clothing also fought pro-Morsi protesters in fierce street clashes.
Residents
of Cairo mostly stayed off the streets Friday in anticipation of the
Brotherhood rallies. A military-imposed nighttime curfew in Cairo and 13
other provinces will start two hours earlier Friday.
Once
Egypt's most powerful group, the Brotherhood appears weakened and
unable to draw massive crowds for protests after the fierce security
crackdown. Hundreds of the group's members have been detained, including
top leaders, as well as members' relatives.
It
also has forced the group to plan and operate underground, the way it
has for much of its more than 80 year existence. Protester Ahmed Khaled,
among those leading the largest Cairo protest from Nasr City to
Heliopolis, said organizers weren't telling protesters where the march
was heading for security reasons.
Khaled and
others said they are receiving instructions by phone on where to direct
their march. He declined to elaborate further, nor did he say who was
leading the march.
"We stopped communicating
the itinerary and destination of the marches so nobody can follow us or
wait for us with snipers at the arrival point," he said.
Authorities
took television channels sympathetic to the Brotherhood off-air after
Morsi's ouster. Qatar-based Al-Jazeera's local affiliate in Egypt, which
has aired comments from wanted Brotherhood leaders and extensively
covered their protests, has faced raids on its offices. The network also
has had employees across its channels arrested.
On
Friday, security officials quoted in the state-owned Ahram Online said
they confiscated cameras and microphones for the channel in private cars
near protests. The government is moving closer to banning its
broadcasts.
As protesters marched, many in the
crowd expressed anger at the military-backed government. Demonstrator
Sherif Osama said his cousin was killed during the Rabaa sit-in raid and
that he was out "to take revenge."
"He was
killed by a bullet in his back that went out from the front," Osama
said. "At the morgue, they wrote on the death certificate that he
committed suicide."
---
Associated Press write Mariam Rizk contributed to this report.
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