Al jazeera -- Despite a very real threat of death, government crackdowns have spurred a new wave of protesters to take to the streets.
Protesters in Ramses Square [Reuters]
The sounds of bullets being fired
and plumes of tear gas coming out of Cairo's Ramses Square were not
unexpected. Neither were the scores left dead as a result.
Marches - at least two dozen - were called for by a number of groups protesting against Wednesday's violent clearing
of two sit-ins held in support of deposed president Mohamed Morsi,
which resulted in an estimated 600 people killed and hundreds more
injured.
All were to head to Ramses Square on Friday, where
police, military and roaming packs of plain-clothed thugs were waiting
for them.
State media carried warnings telling Cairenes to avoid
certain areas and, indeed, apart from the areas where marchers set off,
most of Cairo - a crowded, noisy city of roughly 18 million - resembled a
ghost town.
Given that there is a state of emergency curfew
backed up by a will to use deadly force, why would so many choose to
participate in such marches?
Are all of the protesters violent and extremist? No.
Some, like Dina Badry, said that Friday's march was the first they'd
participated in. "I came because when they shot the first person [on
Wednesday] they shot every Egyptian," said Badry. "They killed us all."
Ahmed
Awad, 33, who said he did not stay at either of the pro-Morsi vigils in
Cairo, said: "I don't belong to any political party, I'm here to fight
for justice and for democracy, and to fight against military rule."
"Everything
is expected," said Awad, a civil engineer, when asked if he feared
violent clashes at Ramses Square. "But the goal of these marches is the
goals of the January 25 revolution... and I hope these can be reached
peacefully."
Mohamed Mohsin, 28, also said that while he didn't participate in the vigils, what happened on Wednesday was wrong.
"What happened in Rabaa was so depressing - all the dead people," he said. "None of it should have happened."
He
wasn't alone. Others we tried to contact for reactions to Friday’s
marches - including former jihaddists and ex-military men - gave the
same answer: They were too depressed to talk.
And with today's events to add to their sorrow, they will not likely wish to speak tomorrow either.
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