CAIRO (AP) --
Authorities outlined plans Friday to break up two sit-ins by supporters
of deposed President Mohammed Morsi, saying they would set up a cordon
around the protest sites, and riot police used tear gas to disperse
demonstrators threatening a TV complex.
Morsi
backers also showed their defiance by briefly setting up a third camp
near the airport, but later folded their tents and left.
The
military-backed interim government seeks to end a political stalemate
that has paralyzed Egypt and deeply divided the country. Supporters of
Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood say they will not disperse until he is
returned to power.
The second-ranking U.S.
diplomat arrived in the Egyptian capital for talks on the political
crisis, as Secretary of State John Kerry warned both sides that "the
last thing we want is more violence."
Also
Friday, Amnesty International reported cases of alleged killings and
torture at the hands of Morsi supporters inside the protest camps,
saying that one man had his throat cut and another was stabbed to death.
In
southwestern Cairo, police fired tear gas at Morsi supporters who
rallied in front of Media City, a site housing most of Egypt's private
TV stations, a security official said. A second official told the state
news agency that protesters tried to "obstruct traffic in an attempt to
affect work at the complex."
The rally was "a
desperate attempt by rioters from the (Islamist) current," Maj. Gen.
Abdel-Fattah Othman, a spokesman for the Interior Ministry, told the
private TV station Mehwer. "There was reinforcement from police and army
that will not allow any reckless person to get close to the Media City
or storm it."
He described the protesters as
"brainwashed" to attack broadcasters perceived as secular opponents of
the Islamists. Last year, Morsi supporters held a sit-in near Media
City, often harassing TV personalities and forcing many of them to sneak
into the studios from other entrances.
The
new unrest came as state-controlled TV reported that security forces
will establish a cordon within 48 hours around the two main protest
sites in Cairo where thousands have been camped out since before Morsi
was ousted by the military on July 3.
The
government offered protection and "safe passage" to those willing to
leave the two main camps - a large one outside the Rabaah al-Adawiya
Mosque in eastern Cairo and a smaller one near Cairo University's main
campus in Giza. The leadership had earlier given orders to police to end
what it described as "threat to national security" and sources of
"citizens' terrorism."
Authorities will let
people leave without checking their identities or arresting them, but
they will not allow anyone into the protest camps, the report said. It
did not elaborate on the next steps, but the government earlier said it
will use water cannons and tear gas in dispersing the crowds.
The
Morsi supporters are also planning rallies late Friday outside security
headquarters near one sit-in site, including the Republican Guard club,
where they had staged a protest that turned bloody last month, and
another army building.
The security cordon
around the protest camps raises the possibility of new violence, which
has killed more than 130 Morsi supporters and injured hundreds since the
military coup. The ouster followed mass demonstrations calling for
Morsi to step down after a year in office, saying his policies had
failed and he had put power in the hands of his Islamist group.
Facing
domestic and international pressure to avoid bloodshed, authorities
have taken the unusual step of going into details of its security plans.
Interior
Minister Mohammed Ibrahim told a newspaper that police have finalized
plans for breaking up the sit-ins, and were awaiting orders from
prosecutors to start the second phase of its operation.
Police
have given authorities information about weapons in the protest camps
and the "dangers emanating" from there, and that the next phase of the
plan, which includes surrounding the sites, would begin within hours, he
was quoted as saying.
"The forces have
established their presence in various areas with the aim of protecting
security and stability," Ibrahim said, adding that the ministry was
awaiting legal action from the prosecutors. He said a prosecution team
will accompany the security forces to monitor how they deal with the
protesters.
Ibrahim told the newspaper that he
was awaiting approval from the National Defense Council on measures
relating to the final phase of the operation, which would be the use of
force while trying not to injure anyone.
The
Amnesty International report quoted a survivor of an attack by Morsi
supporters near the Cairo University sit-in as saying that he saw one
bloodied man have his throat cut and another stabbed to death.
The
report also cited accounts from survivors that Morsi backers also
abducted and tortured their political opponents with beatings and
electric shocks at or near the protest sites.
The
Interior Ministry last weekend had said 11 bodies were found near one
of the protest sites, with some showing signs of torture, apparently by
members of the sit-ins who believed the victims were spies.
Near
the Rabaah protest camp, people armed with sticks and makeshift body
armor stood guard behind walls of sandbags, tires and bricks.
One
speaker defiantly told the crowd that the military leader, Gen.
Abdel-Fatah el-Sissi, appeared reluctant to carry out his promise to
break up the sit-ins.
"This man is about to
fall now in the face of all these retractions," the speaker said to
thousands of people who gathered for a meal to break their daytime fast
for the holy month of Ramadan.
Ahmed Madani, 26, was installing a new tent at one of the camp entrances, saying the facilities will have a kitchen and toilets.
"We
are here to show them that we are determined to stay and we won't give
up," he said. "Even if I have to die, I will not leave. We are thousands
ready to die for our cause."
The pro-Morsi
camps have disrupted daily life in Cairo, blocking traffic and
antagonizing some residents already suffering under Egypt's economic
woes.
"A peaceful sit-in does not block roads,
it doesn't terrorize people, it does not kill people and it does not
attack people," said Wahid Idris, an opponent of the Muslim Brotherhood.
"I want them to use any means to put an end to that sit-in."
In
addition to the smaller sit-in across town, a new vigil sprung up
briefly near Cairo's international airport, on the outskirts of the
suburb of Heliopolis, in a neighborhood known as "The Thousand Houses."
An
Associated Press reporter saw thousands of protesters, many of them are
families and women in conservative Muslim dress, occupying a square and
laying prayer rugs on the asphalt. They raised banners with Morsi's
portrait saying, "Down with military rule," waved Egyptian flags and
chanted, "Go away Sissi! Morsi is my president."
About
six hours later, however, the camp was dismantled because organizers
believed it to be insecure, said Adel Hassan, a protester who folded his
tent.
U.S. Deputy Secretary of State William
Burns arrived in Cairo, and an Egyptian Foreign Ministry official said
he would meet with interim leadership officials and representatives from
the Muslim Brotherhood and its allies Saturday.
Amr
Darag, one of the Brotherhood negotiators who will meet with Burns,
told the AP that the group and its allies are looking for
"confidence-building measures" in order for them to sit at the table
with their rivals.
Such measures include
releasing detained Brotherhood leaders, unfreezing the group's assets,
lifting the ban on its TV stations and ending violence against its
protests. Darag said the group can't order its protesters to go home
because they are fighting for their rights and the reinstatement of
Morsi as president.
It was unclear if Burns
would see Morsi during his second visit to Cairo since the coup. On
Monday, top European Union diplomat Catherine Ashton saw Morsi for two
hours at the facility where he is being held by the military. An African
Union delegation also briefly met the ousted president a day later.
In
London, Kerry sought to clarify controversial remarks he made Thursday
about the crisis when he told Geo TV in Pakistan that the Egyptian
military was "restoring democracy."
The
comment was seen by some as a signal the U.S. was siding with the
military, even though the State Department has repeatedly said the U.S.
is not taking sides.
Kerry said Friday that
all parties - the military as well as the Morsi supporters - should be
inclusive and work toward a peaceful resolution of the crisis.
"The
last thing that we want is more violence," he said. "The temporary
government has a responsibility with respect to demonstrators to give
them the space to be able to demonstrate in peace. But at the same
time, the demonstrators have a responsibility not to stop everything
from proceeding in Egypt."
A spokesman of
Egypt's Mulim Brotherhood, Gehad el-Haddad, denounced Kerry's remarks,
asking if Kerry would similarly approve of Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel
deposing President Barack Obama if large protests took place in the
United States.
Rights groups have warned
against using force to end the protests. The New York-based Human Rights
Watch urged the interim leadership to take all measures to avert
bloodshed.
"To avoid another bloodbath,
Egypt's civilian rulers need to ensure the ongoing right of protesters
to assemble peacefully, and seek alternatives to a forcible dispersal of
the crowds," said Nadim Houry, deputy director of the Middle East and
North Africa division of Human Rights Watch.
The
Muslim Brotherhood has opposed all measures taken by the military since
the coup, including the appointment of an interim president, the
suspension the constitution and the disbanding of the Islamist-dominated
legislative council.
---
Associated Press writer Tony G. Gabriel contributed to this report.
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