Hundreds of angry supporters of ousted president Mohammed Morsi marched through Egypt's second city of Alexandria on Wednesday rioting and armed with wooden clubs, an Agence France Presse reporter said.
Chanting "Morsi is my president", the protesters set fire to car tires and tore down pictures of army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, who was behind the Islamist leader's July 3 overthrow.
At one cafe where Sisi's picture was hanging, they smashed the doors and beat up the patrons as they shouted "Sisi is a killer."
In the Ibrahimiya district, they stormed a police station and looted furniture and equipment inside, an AFP reporter said.
Earlier, in another part of Alexandria, tear gas canisters rained down on a pro-Morsi march in the Sharq neighborhood, amid repeated bursts of automatic gunfire.
Hundreds of Morsi loyalists had marched through the city when police fired tear gas to disperse them.
Residents, armed with clubs, came out of their homes and shops to help the police, detaining Morsi supporters and handing them over to officers at Sharq police station.
Morsi supporters, carrying Egyptian flags and pictures of the deposed leader, then clashed with his opponents on a road carpeted with rocks.
The violence in Alexandria comes hours after security forces stormed two pro-Morsi protest camps in Cairo, leaving scores dead.
Officials said at least one person was killed in the Alexandria violence and that 10 people were injured.
Morsi, Egypt's first freely elected president, was ousted by the military last month with popular backing.
Deep political divisions in the country have intensified since his removal, with the Islamist leader's supporters vowing to keep fighting for his reinstatement at any cost.
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