Egypt

Egyptian security forces fire teargas at Islamist protesters

Egyptian security forces fired bird shot and teargas to prevent supporters of deposed Islamist President Mohamed Morsy from marching on Sunday to the site of a protest camp that was destroyed two months ago, a Reuters witness said.
 
The crowd of about 100 people were students from Al-Azhar University, the historic seat of Sunni Muslim learning. They threw rocks at riot police stationed outside the gates of the university, and police threw the stones back.
 
The university is in the same Cairo suburb as the Rabaa al-Adawiya mosque, scene of one of two pro-Morsy protest camps crushed by security forces on August 14. Hundreds of protesters were killed.
 
“Rabaa Square is completely off-limits,” a security source said. “Protesters are not allowed to move inside it.” A separate security source said 11 students had been arrested.
 
Authorities have cracked down hard on Morsy’s Muslim Brotherhood. The group was outlawed by a court order after the army overthrew Morsy and installed an interim government in July following massive street protests a year after his election.
 
Brotherhood leaders, including Morsy, have been arrested on charges of inciting or taking part in violence.
 
Brotherhood supporters say they will keep protesting until the army-backed government falls. But demonstrations are far smaller than the ones that immediately followed Morsy’s downfall.
 
The Interior Ministry said in a statement that security forces took action after 3,000 students blocked roads around the Al-Azhar campus.
 
A few police trucks kept students from moving beyond the front entrance of the facility.
 
“We want the return of legitimate rule to Egypt, we want the return of President Morsy” said Mohamed Magdi, a commerce student. “We are unarmed students. We just approached them and said ’you are our police’ and then they attacked us.”
 
The students had been protesting for the second day on campus in support of Morsy. Graffiti scrawled on university buildings condemned General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, the army chief who toppled Morsy, as a murderer and traitor.
 
“We will take measures to continue studies even with the continuation of the demonstrations,” said Ibrahim el-Hadud, a university official.
 
The army rejects allegations from the Brotherhood that it deposed Morsy in a coup and says it was responding to the will of the people.
 
The government refers to the Brotherhood as “terrorists” and does not distinguish between the movement and al Qaeda-affiliated groups in the lawless Sinai Peninsula who carry out almost daily attacks on security forces.
 
The Brotherhood describes itself as a peaceful movement.

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