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U.S. Condemns Deadly Street Clashes in Egypt

The United States on Tuesday denounced violence in Egypt that left seven people dead after security forces clashed with supporters of the country's ousted president Mohammed Morsi.

State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell was careful to note that Washington was not taking sides in the turmoil, after the Egyptian army toppled the elected Islamist leader on July 3 amid mass protests.

"We... strongly condemn the overnight violence in Cairo," Ventrell told reporters.

"Simply put, violence makes the transition much more difficult."

Clashes on the streets of Cairo and in nearby Giza, which left more than 260 wounded, came only hours after U.S. Under Secretary of State Bill Burns visited the country and appealed for an end to violence.

"We don't take sides" and Washington wants to see Egypt "get the democratic process back on track," Ventrell said.

The spokesman said the message Burns had conveyed in Cairo was Washington's "desire to have an inclusive, tolerant, democratic future for Egypt."

"He talked about our desire for a non-violent, inclusive path forward," he said.

Although Burns did not have a face-to-face meeting with Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood movement, the U.S. diplomat did speak by phone to one of the group's representatives, Ventrell said.

"We want to ease the polarization that can poison society -- we want to move from polarization," he said.

Egypt has been shaken by a series of deadly attacks since the coup, and the latest deaths brings to more than 100 the number of people killed, according to an Agence France Presse tally of confirmed deaths.

Source: Agence France Presse


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