The high death toll in Sunday’s clashes between security forces and Islamist protesters came as crowds from Egypt’s two rival camps – supporters of the ousted Islamist president, Mohammed Morsi, and backers of the military that deposed him – poured into the streets and turned on each other.
Morsi’s supporters fired birdshot and threw firebombs at police who responded with gunshots and teargas.
Even as fighting continued in the streets, the military went ahead with lavish celebrations for the holiday marking the 40th anniversary of the start of the 1973 Mideast war with Israel.
On Sunday evening, a concert was aired live on state TV from a military-run Cairo stadium where pop stars from Egypt, Lebanon and the Gulf sang anthems to the army and dancers twirled on stage before a cheering crowd. Military chief Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, other top brass and interim President Adly Mansour attended the show.
“There are those who think the military can be broken,” el-Sissi said in an address at the concert.
“You see the Pyramids? The military is like the pyramids, because the Egyptian people are on its side.”
Mohammed Morsi was Egypt’s first civilian and first freely elected president, succeeding four since the early 1950s who hailed from a military background. But after a year in office, Morsi was faced by massive protests demanding his ouster, accusing his Muslim Brotherhood of taking over power – and on July 3, el-Sissi removed him.
The military is now back as the real source of power in Egypt, and state and independent media have been depicting it as the country’s saviour – with growing calls for el-Sissi to run in the presidential election due early next year.
Since the fierce crackdown on Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood, over 2,000 from their ranks have been jailed.
The Health Ministry reported 51 people killed nationwide, at least 40 of them in Cairo, and more than 240 injured. The Interior Ministry, which is in charge of the police, said 423 Morsi supporters were detained across the nation.
“At the time when festivities are arranged for one section of the population, they call on Egyptians to dance on the dead bodies of their compatriots who oppose the coup,” a coalition grouping the Brotherhood and its allies said in a statement. It called for a rally in Cairo’s central Tahrir Square on Friday.
While clashes claimed lives in Tahrir Square, The scenes of clashe Sunday’s carnival-like Pmood in Tahrir, where thousands of supporters of the military waved Egyptian flags, blew whistles and touted posters of el-Sissi. Adding to the festivities, a military band played, and men spun in whirling dervish-style dances.
Demonstrators distributed petitions demanding that el-Sissi run for president.
“We cannot find a man who can run the country at this stage except for him (el-Sissi),” said aspiring actor Wafaa el-Sharqawi as she handed out the petition.
Soldiers barricaded entrances to Tahrir with barbed wire and armoured personnel vehicles to guard it against possible attempts by Morsi’s supporters to enter the square – the epicentre of the anti-Mubarak uprising nearly three years ago.
Army helicopters flew low over the square, and some two dozen F-16 jet-fighters staged a celebratory flight over Cairo in late morning, ushering in the commemoration of the 1973 war.
At 2pm – the time the war began in 1973 – church bells tolled and chants of “Allahu akbar,” or “God is greatest,” blared from the mosques.
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