Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood called on followers to march in protest in Cairo on Thursday, after at least 525 people were killed in a security crackdown on the Islamist movement that has left the most populous Arab nation polarized and in turmoil.
Cairo and other cities hit by shocking violence on Wednesday
were largely calm overnight, after the army-installed government declared a
month-long state of emergency and imposed a dusk-to-dawn curfew on the capital
and 10 other provinces.
But whether the powerful military can keep a lid on the fury
felt by millions of supporters of ousted President Mohamed Morsi, whom it
deposed on July 3, is unclear.
The next potential flashpoint comes later on Thursday, after
Morsi's Brotherhood movement called for marches in the capital to protest
against the deaths.
His Islamist followers clashed with police and troops who
used bulldozers, teargas and live ammunition on Wednesday to clear out two
Cairo sit-ins that had become a hub of Brotherhood resistance to the military.
The clashes spread quickly, and a health ministry official
said on Thursday that 525 people were killed and more than 3,500 injured in
fighting in Cairo, Alexandria and numerous towns and cities around the mostly
Muslim nation of 84 million.
It was the third mass killing of Islamist demonstrators
since Morsi was deposed six weeks ago, but the scale of Wednesday's bloodshed
took many by surprise and signaled that the military was determined to tighten
its grip on the country.
The decision to forcibly clear the sit-ins defied Western
appeals for restraint and a negotiated settlement to Egypt's political crisis,
and there has been swift condemnation from many, though not all, countries.
In Ankara, Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan called on
Thursday for the UN Security Council to convene quickly and act after what he
described as a massacre in Egypt.
"I am calling on Western countries. You remained silent
in Gaza, you remained silent in Syria ... You are still silent on Egypt. So how
come you talk about democracy, freedom, global values and human rights?"
he told a news conference.
But the United Arab Emirates, one of several Gulf Arab
states unsettled by Morsi's victory in a 2012 election, expressed support for
the crackdown, saying the Egyptian government had "exercised maximum
self-control".
Tents still smolder
At the site of one of the Cairo sit-ins, garbage collectors
cleared still-smoldering piles of burnt tents on Thursday. Soldiers dismantled
the stage at the heart of the protest camp. A burnt-out armored vehicle stood
abandoned in the street.
The Muslim Brotherhood said the true death toll was far
higher, with a spokesman saying 3,000 people had been killed in a
"massacre". It was impossible to verify the figures independently
given the extent of the violence.
The state of emergency and curfew restored to the army
powers of arrest and indefinite detention it held for decades under autocrat
Hosni Mubarak, ousted in a 2011 popular uprising.
The army insists it does not seek power and acted last month
to remove Morsi in response to mass demonstrations calling for his resignation.
It has installed an interim government to implement plans
for fresh elections in around six months, but efforts to restore democracy have
been overshadowed by a political crisis that has deeply divided Egyptians
between pro- and anti-Morsi camps.
Vice President Mohamed ElBaradei, a Nobel Peace Prize winner
who lent liberal political support to the ousting of Egypt's first freely
elected president, resigned in dismay at the use of force instead of a
negotiated end to the six-week stand-off.
Other liberals and technocrats in the temporary government
did not follow suit. Interim Prime Minister Hazem el-Beblawi spoke in a
televised address of a "difficult day for Egypt" but said the
government had no choice but to order the crackdown to prevent anarchy
spreading.
"We found that matters had reached a point that no
self-respecting state could accept," he said.
Churches targeted
Violence rippled out from Cairo, with Morsi supporters and
security forces clashing in the cities of Alexandria, Minya, Assiut, Fayoum and
Suez and in Buhayra and Beni Suef provinces.
Islamists staged revenge attacks on Christian targets in
several areas, setting fire to churches, homes and businesses after Coptic Pope
Tawadros gave his blessing to the military takeover that ousted Morsi, security
sources and state media said.
Churches were attacked in the Nile Valley towns of Minya,
Sohag and Assiut, where Christians escaped across the roof into a neighbouring
building after a mob surrounded and hurled bricks at their place of worship,
state news agency MENA said.
Interior Minister Mohamed Ibrahim told a news conference 43
members of the police force were killed in the clashes. He vowed to restore Mubarak-era security after announcing, in a statement last month that chilled human rights campaigners, the return of notorious political police departments that had been scrapped after the 2011 revolution.
Wednesday's official death toll took the number of people
killed in political violence since Morsi's fall to well over 700, mostly
Islamist supporters of the deposed president.
The United States, the European Union and the United Nations
condemned the violence and called for the lifting of the state of emergency and
an inclusive political solution to the crisis.
US Secretary of State John Kerry called the bloodshed in
Egypt "deplorable" - a word US diplomats rarely use - and urged all
sides to seek a political solution.
A US official told Reuters that Washington was considering
cancelling a major joint military exercise with Egypt, due this year, after the
latest violence, in what would be a direct snub to the Egyptian armed forces.
The "Bright Star" exercise has been a cornerstone
of US-Egyptian military relations and began in 1981 after the Camp David peace
accords between Egypt and Israel. The United States has already halted delivery
of four F-16 warplanes in a signal of its displeasure.
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