10 Dead, 210 Hurt as Morsi Backers, Opponents Clash across Egypt amid Gunfight between Army, Islamist Protesters

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

Running clashes erupted on Friday evening between supporters and opponents of Egypt's ousted Islamist president Mohamed Morsi near Cairo's Tahrir Square.

The sound of gunfire could be heard as the two sides hurled rocks at each other on the October 6 bridge leading into Tahrir. Below the bridge, ambulances were ferrying the injured out of the area.

Health Ministry official Khaled al-Khatib said 10 people have been killed and 210 wounded in clashes around the country involving opponents and backers of Morsi, as well as security forces.

Earlier on Friday clashes broke out between the two rival camps across the country, the official MENA news agency reported, after deadly confrontations between the toppled Islamist's backers and security forces.

In Cairo, at least three people were killed when troops opened fire on a pro-Morsi rally, an Agence France Presse reporter at the scene said. The health ministry later confirmed three people died at the same location.

The ministry also said one person had been killed near the Rabaa al-Adawiya mosque in Cairo's Nasr City where tens of thousands of Morsi supporters had gathered to denounce his ouster by the military.

In North Sinai, two policemen were killed in al-Arish when unidentified gunmen opened fire on a government building they were guarding, security officials said.

Earlier in the same town, Morsi supporters attacked a government building, MENA said, adding that security forces had fired shots in the air to disperse the crowd.

Before dawn, an Egyptian soldier was killed early and two wounded in coordinated rocket and machinegun attacks by Islamist militants on army checkpoints and a police base in the restive Sinai, medics said.

In the canal city of Ismailiya, army troops fired shots in the air to disperse pro-Morsi protesters who tried to storm a government building.

Anti-riot police also deployed in the coastal city of Alexandria, firing tear gas to control clashes between supporters and opponents of Morsi in the neighborhood of Sidi Gaber.

The northern province of Beheira also saw confrontations between pro- and anti-Morsi protesters that left six people injured.

In the canal city of Suez, Islamists hurled stones at security forces before being dispersed.

Islamist protesters had called for rallies under the slogan "Friday of rejection" vowing to defend Morsi's legitimacy, denouncing the overthrow of Egypt's first freely elected president as a coup d'etat.

The anti-Morsi camp on Friday launched an urgent call for rival demonstrations to support the "June 30 revolution" which saw millions take to the streets to demand Morsi's resignation.

Comments 6
Thumb LebCynic 05 July 2013, 16:14

No human likes to be made to conform to the beliefs of another. Salafists/wahabis want to inflict their strict and extremist ideology on the entire Middle East region. I believe that the freedom loving Arabs of Egypt are prevailing against this wave of Islamists. Long live the Egyptian sawra.

Missing helicopter 05 July 2013, 20:50

Right on distructive, 100% correct. Likewise, may the freedom loving Lebanese do the same and prevail over HA and all armed groups within.

Thumb benzona 05 July 2013, 23:58

Deadly uppercut! K.O!!!!!

Missing VINCENT 05 July 2013, 22:30

Well there is always that 10 to 20% that haven't in the past, do not in the present and will not in the future learn from their past mistakes, experiences of their ancestors, knowledge from other past civilizations, the mistakes being made today by other countries, etc. And unfortunately these idiots are a magnet to the poor and/or neglected since they may not have another choice. In case of Egypt, looks like Mubarak neglected the people who needed help the most.

Thumb daytime 06 July 2013, 05:54

Go to the Mosque on Friday...After prayer kill any human being that doesn't share your ideology. Fridays turning out to be a bloody day every week in the Arab world! Does it make any sense?

Missing samiam 06 July 2013, 12:05

I call a spade a spade--I don't know if terrorist is the right term, but scum and filth do come to mind. Also, I look at the actions of the Egyptian army and see how they came to the aid of the people and see the actions by the Syrian army and come to similar conclusions.

See where that path takes you....