Archive for Abbasseya Square

Public Prosecutor Abdel Meguid Mahmoud on Monday issued pardons for some detainees from the revolution and the transitional period, pursuant to President Mohamed Morsy's decree.

The pardons included those held in connection with the events outside the Cabinet building, on Mohamed Mahmoud Street and in Abbasseya Square, but excluded those who allegedly participated in setting fire to the Institut d'Egypte and the Tax Authority building, as well as people accused of committing robberies and vandalism, possessing drugs or destroying state property.

Mahmoud also mandated his office to examine complaints and requests from convicts and suspects who have not been included in the list as to whether the pardon could be applied to them.

An Interior Ministry source told Al-Masry Al-Youm that it would release all those included in the decision once it received the public prosecutor’s list, adding that there are few revolutionary detainees still in prison.

Morsy issued a mass pardon for all those accused or found guilty of crimes pertaining to the events of the 25 January revolution — with some exceptions — on 8 October.

The decision to issue general amnesty was based on the recommendation of Morsy's military trial review committee. However, the amnesty only applies to those who were charged in between 25 January 2011 and 30 June 2012, when Morsy took office.

In a speech given before thousands in Tahrir Square on 29 June, Morsy promised to fight for the release of all civilian detainees in military prisons. He shortly thereafter issued a decree to form a panel to review the cases of those detainees.

Since then, that presidential committee has released hundreds of detainees convicted in both military and civilian courts in several waves of pardons.

Activists have said that despite these mass pardons, Morsy has done little to stop the brutality of the military police. They demand the release of all civilians convicted in military trials since January 2011, without exception.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

Tags: , ,

Mamdouh al-Wali, head of the Journalists Syndicate, called on the ruling Supreme Council of Armed Forces to immediately release the journalists and media personnel who had been arrested during the clashes that took place on Friday in Abbasseya between military police and protesters.

Wali said in a phone call with Al Jazeera Mubasher Misr that the board of the syndicate would hold an emergency session Sunday to take a decisive position on the attacks, assaults and random arrests of journalists and reporters on Friday.

Wali added that the syndicate did not know the exact number of media personnel in detention after the Abbasseya clashes.

The syndicate will organize sessions to listen to eyewitness journalists and reporters who were at the scene and were arrested and detained in military prisons in order to determine the reasons for their arrests.

On Friday, military police have broken up a sit-in in Abbasseya Square near the Defense Ministry by force using automatic weapons, tear gas and water cannons. Hundreds of people were injured in the ensuing violence, and hundreds of protesters and journalists were detained.

The Committee to Protect Journalists said on Friday that at least 18 journalists have been assaulted, injured, or arrested since Wednesday while covering the protests at the Defense Ministry.

The Journalists Syndicate announced Friday evening that Al-Masry Al-Youm photographer Mohamed al-Shamy and Al-Watan photographer Mohamed Omar were injured, and that Ahmed Ramadan and Islam Aboul Ezz from Al-Badeel and Abdel Rahman Meshref from Al-Watan were missing.

Virginie Nyugen, a Belgian photojournalist for Egypt Independent, was injured then detained for questioning while covering the clashes on Friday. She was released after several hours.
 

Tags: , , ,

Security forces have pushed protesters out of the Abbasseya area after clashes erupted in front of the Defense Ministry between protesters and security forces. Military police used armored vehicles to chase protesters to Ramses Square. Al-Masry Al-Youm reported that the forces fired birdshots at protesters, resulting in some injuries.

Thugs also attacked protesters on Ramses Street with molotov cocktails. Al-Masry Al-Youm quoted a military source as saying that the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces will issue a statement within hours about the violence. The sources added that the SCAF will likely put a curfew in place.

Military forces had used tear gas and water cannons to force protesters out of Abbasseya Square. Gunfire was also heard in the area. The Health Ministry has reported that 59 people have been injured.

Al-Masry Al-Youm reported that makeshift tents belonging to participants in an ongoing sit-in were set on fire by security forces as they cleared the square.

The April 6 Youth Movement announced that it would withdraw from Abbasseya to prevent bloodshed but also stressed its demands. Many protesters are attempting to march back to Tahrir Square.

"I was here since 1 pm. The soldiers were in front of the wire. We were chanting, but it was peaceful. Around 2:30 they snatched three guys and took them. That was when the people started to throw stones," Ezz Saeed, a 34-year-old engineer, told Egypt Independent.

State-run Al-Ahram newspaper reported that the armed forces intensified its presence early in the day outside the Defense Ministry and the surrounding streets, setting up barbed wire and warning protesters to exercise restraint.

Hundreds of protesters had marched from Fatah Mosque in Ramses Square to Abbasseya Square. Al-Azhar students, Salafis, Revolutionary Socialists, the Kefaya Movement and the April 6 Youth Movement took part in the march, Al-Masry Al-Youm said. Protesters carried images of martyrs killed in clashes during the transitional period.

Protesters had approached the barb wire surrounding the Defense Ministry, while the armed forces played patriotic songs over loudspeakers in an attempt to drown out chants against the military council. Extra troops were deployed to secure the ministry.

Protesters chanted against the military council and called for a new revolution. Some carried Ahly football club flags while others carried the flag of Saudi Arabia.

Al-Masry Al-Youm reported that army reserve officer Islam Maarouf said that he and other colleagues decided to join the protests to denounce the military council, which alleges it protected the revolution. He told Al-Masry Al-Youm that the actual protectors of the revolution were soldiers who defied orders to shoot at protesters.

Dozens of Ain Shams University students had joined protesters in Abbasseya Square after Friday prayers, chanting anti-SCAF slogans. A march of hundreds of protesters left Tahrir Square to also join the demonstration in Abbasseya.

The students raised pictures of their colleague, medical student Abul Hassan Ibrahim, who was killed while assisting the wounded during Wednesday’s clashes in Abbasseya Square. They demanded that SCAF be prosecuted “for its involvement in killing participants in the sit-in [in Abbasseya Square].”

Thousands of people had performed Friday prayers in Tahrir. Independent MP Mahmoud al-Khodairy, head of the People’s Assembly Legislative Affairs Committee, and Sheikh Mazhar Shahin, imam of the Omar Makram Mosque, were present among the protesters in Tahrir.

The protesters chanted slogans against Supreme Council of the Armed Forces and its leader, Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, saying, “Down with military rule,” “Get out, get out,” “Down with the field marshal,” and “The people want to execute the field marshal.”

Political and revolutionary movements had called for protests in Tahrir in response to Wednesday's violence in Abbasseya, which left 11 dead and hundreds injured. 

The protest is urging the military to hand over power as scheduled, the cancellation of Article 28 of the Constitutional Declaration and the punishment of those responsible for the deaths in Abbasseya.

Tags: , , , , ,

A march of hundreds of protesters left Tahrir Square after Friday prayers to join the demonstration being staged in Abbasseya Square.

Protesters joined the march from three stages that had been set up in Tahrir.

Thousands of people had performed Friday prayers in Tahrir. Independent MP Mahmoud al-Khodairy, head of the People’s Assembly Legislative Affairs Committee, and Sheikh Mazhar Shahin, imam of the Omar Makram Mosque, were present among the protesters in Tahrir.

The protesters chanted slogans against Supreme Council of the Armed Forces and its leader, Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, saying, “Down with military rule,” “Get out, get out,” “Down with the field marshal,” and “The people want to execute the field marshal.”

Supporters of disqualified presidential hopeful Hazem Salah Abu Ismail announced that they would march to Abbasseya from Tahrir after Friday prayers.

State-run Al-Ahram newspaper reported that the armed forces intensified its presence outside the Defense Ministry in Abbasseya and the surrounding streets, setting up barbed wire and warning protesters to exercise restraint.

Earlier in the day, marchers had arrived in Abbasseya, some from Alexandria, and amassed in front of the barbed wire, raising black flags that read, “No God but God” and chanted, "No God but God; the jihad, the jihad."

The armed forces, meanwhile, read Quranic verses aloud, which protesters considered an attempt to disrupt their chants and force them remain silent, Al-Masry Al-Youm reported.

Political and revolutionary movements had called for protests in Tahrir in response to recent violence in Abbasseya, which left 11 dead and hundreds injured. 

The protest is urging the military to hand over power as scheduled, the cancellation of Article 28 of the Constitutional Declaration and the punishment of those responsible for the deaths in Abbasseya.

A number of protesters set up a stage and hung banners in Tahrir as political debates on the repercussions of the Abbasseya clashes spread among people in the square.

State-run news service MENA reported that Saudi flags were being sold in the square, but did not provide further details.

Traffic was smooth in the streets surrounding Tahrir before noon, while the area around the Interior Ministry was heavily fortified with tightened security measures and extra troops.

Al-Ahram said the area around the Defense Ministry and Abbasseya Square, where clashes had been taking place earlier this week, was cautiously calm in the morning. Around 500 people have been sitting-in there over the last few days to demand that the military transfer power to a civilian transitional council.

The protesters raised banners that read, “Down with the military rule,” and “The people want to bring down the regime.” The number of tents had notably increased, Al-Ahram added.
 

Tags: , ,

Thousands of protesters performed Friday prayers in Tahrir Square as a march that included Alexandria residents arrived in Abbasseya Square on Friday afternoon to join protesters at the Defense Ministry.

Political and revolutionary movements have called for protests in Tahrir in response to recent violence in Abbasseya, which left 11 dead and hundreds injured. 

The protest is urging the military to hand over power as scheduled, the cancellation of Article 28 of the Constitutional Declaration and the punishment of those responsible for the deaths in Abbasseya.

Independent MP Mahmoud al-Khodairy, head of the People’s Assembly Legislative Affairs Committee, and Sheikh Mazhar Shahin, imam of the Omar Makram Mosque, were present among the protesters in Tahrir.

The protesters chanted slogans against Supreme Council of the Armed Forces and its leader, Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, saying, “Down with military rule,” “Get out, get out,” “Down with the field marshal,” and “The people want to execute the field marshal.”

Supporters of disqualified presidential hopeful Hazem Salah Abu Ismail announced that they would march to Abbasseya from Tahrir after the prayers.

State-run Al-Ahram newspaper reported that the armed forces intensified its presence outside the Defense Ministry in Abbasseya and the surrounding streets, setting up barbed wire and warning protesters to exercise restraint.

The march to Abbasseya Square from Alexandria stopped in front of the barbed wire, where participants raised black flags that read, “No God but God” and chanted, "No God but God; the jihad, the jihad."

The armed forces, meanwhile, read Quranic verses aloud, which protesters considered an attempt to disrupt their chants and force them remain silent, Al-Masry Al-Youm reported.

A number of protesters set up a stage and hung banners in Tahrir as political debates on the repercussions of the Abbasseya clashes spread among people in the square.

State-run news service MENA reported that Saudi flags were being sold in the square, but did not provide further details.

Traffic was smooth in the streets surrounding Tahrir before noon, while the area around the Interior Ministry was heavily fortified with tightened security measures and extra troops.

Al-Ahram said the area around the Defense Ministry and Abbasseya Square, where clashes had been taking place earlier this week, was cautiously calm. Around 500 people have been sitting-in there over the last few days to demand that the military transfer power to a civilian transitional council.

The protesters raised banners that read, “Down with the military rule,” and “The people want to bring down the regime.” The number of tents had notably increased, Al-Ahram added.
 

Tags: , , ,

A march that included Alexandria residents arrived in Abbasseya Square on Friday afternoon to join protesters at the Defense Ministry, as dozens of protesters made their way to Tahrir Square to participate in an anti-military council demonstration.

State-run Al-Ahram newspaper reported that the armed forces intensified its presence outside the Defense Ministry in Abbasseya and the surrounding streets, setting up barbed wire and warning protesters to exercise restraint.

The march to Abbasseya Square stopped in front of the barbed wire, where participants raised black flags that read, “No God but God” and chanted, "No God but God; the jihad, the jihad."

The armed forces, meanwhile, read Quranic verses aloud, which protesters considered an attempt to disrupt their chants and force them remain silent, Al-Masry Al-Youm reported.

Political and revolutionary movements have called for protests in Tahrir in response to recent violence in Abbasseya, which left 11 dead and hundreds injured.  

Al-Ahram reported that a march from Tahrir Square will head to Abbasseya.

The protest is urging the military to hand over power as scheduled, the cancellation of Article 28 of the Constitutional Declaration and the punishment of those responsible for the deaths in Abbasseya.

A number of protesters set up a stage and hung banners in Tahrir listing the demands of the protest. Political debates on the repercussions of the Abbasseya clashes spread among people in the square.

State-run news service MENA reported that Saudi flags were being sold in the square, but did not provide further details.

Traffic was smooth in the streets surrounding Tahrir before noon, while the area around the Interior Ministry was heavily fortified with tightened security measures and extra troops.

Al-Ahram said the area around the Defense Ministry and Abbasseya Square, where clashes had been taking place earlier this week, was cautiously calm. Around 500 people have been sitting-in there over the last few days to demand that the military transfer power to a civilian transitional council.

The protesters raised banners that read, “Down with the military rule,” and “The people want to bring down the regime.” The number of tents had notably increased, Al-Ahram added.
 

Tags: , ,

Several political movements have announced their participation in a demonstration in Tahrir Square on Friday, and say they will organize marches toward the Defense Ministry to protest the Wednesday’s attack on a sit-in in Abbasseya that left anywhere from seven to 20 people dead.

The political movements have agreed on slogans calling for the transfer of power from the military council to civilians and the cancellation of Article 28 of the Constitutional Declaration, which stipulated that the Presidential Elections Commission’s decisions cannot be challenged in court. Protesters will also demand that the perpetrators of the Abbasseya violence be revealed.

Kefaya movement spokesperson Mohamed Abdel Aziz told state-owned news service MENA that the movement will take part in a march to Abbasseya Square that will start from Fatah Mosque in Ramses Square after Friday prayers. He added that the movement is committed to keeping protests peaceful.

The Democratic Front of the April 6 Youth Movement said it will take part in the demonstrations “to show solidarity for the victims and martyrs and to denounce the policy of oppression and killing used against demonstrators.” The front accused security forces of kidnapping two of its members en route from Sharqiya to Cairo to join protesters outside the Defense Ministry.

The Ghad al-Thawra and the Social Democratic parties and the Youth for Freedom and Justice Movement will also take part in the protest.

Mohamed Morsy, the Freedom and Justice Party’s presidential candidate, said that popular support for the protest is very high.

In Alexandria, political movements called for a protest denouncing the incidents of Abbasseya under the slogan, “The Friday of the End.”

Abul Ezz al-Hariry’s presidential campaign in Alexandria announced their participation in Friday’s protests. The campaign released a statement saying, “We hold the military council responsible for the unjustified attack on Egyptian citizens and confirm the necessity of Egyptian institutions guaranteeing the right of peaceful sit-ins and freedom of expression.”

The state-owned Al-Ahram daily reported the People’s Assembly Speaker Saad al-Katatny and Shura Council Speaker Ahmed Fahmy, both of the FJP, urged protesters to demonstrate in Tahrir Square tomorrow and to avoid the Defense Ministry. They said the right of protest is guaranteed for all as long as there is no damage to state institutions, and stressed that there was no need to head to the Defense Ministry and clash with forces deployed there.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

Tags: , ,

The ruling military council said during a Thursday press conference it would abide by a previously established timetable to hand over power to civilians, despite what it described as “acts of sabotage” to derail the upcoming presidential election.

"What is taking place in Abbasseya Square is clear and known to us all, and nobody will be able to ruin the roadmap that aims to [achieve] the interests of Egypt," Major General Mokhtar al-Mulla, a member of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, said during the news conference at the State Information Service headquarters.

Following sporadic clashes at an Abbasseya sit-in near the Ministry of Defense and ahead of a march planned for Friday by the Revolutionary Socialists group, he warned protesters not to approach the ministry premises.

“We warn anyone carrying a weapon, we won’t allow anybody to assault symbols of the state and the armed forces," Mulla said. "The forces deployed around the Ministry of Defense intend to stop anyone from trying to reach the ministry."

Mulla ruled out the possibility of introducing amendments to the March 2011 Constitutional Declaration, which has governed Egypt during the transitional period. 

"Article 28 of the Constitutional Declaration has the force of law and cannot be canceled by the force of bullying," he said, referring to a controversial article granting the Presidential Elections Commission immunity from court challenges.

Mulla reiterated previous assertions that the armed forces does not want a special position in the new constitution.

When a journalist present challenged him by saying Egypt was witnessing bloody massacres, he rejected the allegation.

Major General Mohamed al-Assar criticized rumors that the SCAF plotted the bloody events to retain power, saying, "After all [of the arrangements for a transfer of power], they say we are plotting for a military coup?

Assar said the military has worked hard to help the Egyptian people achieve a Parliament, a president and a constitution.

“After the handover of power, everyone will see that what has been said against the military was never true, and will recognize the historic role the SCAF has played,” he added.

The military does not support one candidate for president, and "international and regional powers are unhappy with the success Egypt has reached," he claimed.

Assar said the Abbasseya sit-in that began Friday is a “big mistake” due to its proximity to the Defense Ministry and other military institutions.

“It also affected schools, universities and hospitals in the area. That’s why we are saying that Tahrir Square is a suitable place,” he said.

Major General Mamdouh Shahin, the assistant defense minister for legal affairs and member of SCAF, said the Constitutional Declaration was not the reason for the recent violence. He added that the military council solicited the help of many constitutional experts when it was drafting the Constitutional Declaration, and that the articles included were essential to govern the transitional period.

Tags: , , , ,

Military and police intervention halted fighting outside the Defense Ministry after at least nine were killed since early Wednesday morning at a sit-in protest in Abbasseya Square.

Military police, Central Security forces and police officers have set up barricades in the neighborhood to separate the protesters and unidentified assailants, Al-Ahram newspaper reported.

A large number of protesters have gathered around the security forces and armored vehicles, chanting: "The people want to bring down the regime," according to the report.

"Eight armored personnel carriers from the military central zone entered the Abbasseya area to disperse the fighting between protesters, and not to disperse the peaceful demonstrators. However, protesters attacked the armed forces. The armed forces have orders to hold their ground," an army statement said, according to Reuters.

Major General Hassan Mourad, the Cairo security chief, said he negotiated with the protesters to end the fighting. According to the report, the clashes and gunshot firing has halted and the unidentified attackers have retreated to the side streets.

Egypt's army said in its statement that it was deploying extra troops only to control clashes and not to disband the demonstration that has been taking place near the Defense Ministry in Abbasseya Square since Friday.

As of Wednesday, the Health Ministry has reported nine dead and 49 injured in the fighting, state-run news agency MENA reported.

Tareq Saeed, a physician at the sit-in's field hospital, told Al-Masry Al-Youm earlier in the day that 11 protesters have been killed. He said two protesters' throats were slit with knives by unidentified assailants who attacked them at Dar al-Shifaa Hospital. A third person was shot dead in the hospital, according to Saeed.

The army said clashes had been contained and a Reuters witness said the situation on the ground had calmed.

Injuries ranged from bruises to wounds from birdshot, according to Khaled al-Khateeb, the ministry's head of the Central Department for Emergency and Critical Care.

After early morning fighting followed by a few hours of tenuous calm, clashes started again around 9 am. Al-Masry Al-Youm reported that armed men attacked with Molotov cocktails and bird shot.

Dozens of activists began marching late Wednesday morning from Fath Mosque in Ramses Square, heading toward Abbasseya Square. The marchers said they would attempt to end the clashes, Al-Masry Al-Youm reported.

Participants in the march chanted, “Down with the military rule,” and threatened to execute military Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi and Chief of Staff Sami Anan.

Eyewitnesses reported the initial attack in the early hours of the day by unknown men, coming from the direction of the nearby Nour Mosque toward the sit-in.

Al-Masry Al-Youm also reported gunfire at the scene and that these unidentified men fired tear gas at the protesters. Protesters responded by hurling stones. 

While a field hospital treated urgent injuries, critical cases were transferred to the nearby Ain Shams University Hospital, also known as Demerdash. 

The streets leading to the sit-in have been blocked by military police since clashes erupted on Saturday night. 

In protest of the attacks, presidential candidate Abdel Moneim Abouel Fotouh halted his campaign on Wednesday. In a statement, he called on the People’s Assembly to “wake up” the interior minister to fulfill his duties and protect the protesters.

Presidential hopeful Mohamed Selim al-Awa said what is happening in Abbasseya Square is an attempt “to place the country in strife or civil war, which is being planned for and managed by groups with malicious interests.”

In a statement on Wednesday, Awa called on the ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Forces to take responsibility for ensuring protesters' safety and arresting thugs and killers.

Freedom and Justice Party candidate Mohamed Morsy also suspended his campaign for two days out of respect for the casualties.

The Muslim Brotherhood's party said it would boycott a meeting planned between the army council and political parties after violence it said signalled an attempt to "obstruct the handover of power" by the July deadline, Reuters reported.

Mohamed ElBaradei, who recently founded the Constitution Party, called on the ruling military council and Cabinet to step down in the aftermath of the clashes.

“The Abbasseya massacre: military council and Cabinet unable to provide security. You failed. Leave. Egypt is being destroyed,” he posted on Twitter.

After an Ain Shams University medical student was killed in the clashes, all on-campus faculties suspended lectures until Thursday. University Vice President Hassan Eissa said each faculty dean had been authorized to make his or her own decision on whether to suspend lectures or postpone exams in case students are at risk. Lectures went on as normal at the university’s off-campus faculties.

The university announced all its hospitals would receive injured students, and denied reports that they had been closed.

Activists voiced concerns about security forces refraining from protecting the sit-in, suggesting their implication in the attack.

The sit-in began Friday night when a group of supporters of former presidential candidate and Salafi preacher Hazem Salah Abu Ismail marched from Tahrir Square to Abbasseya to protest his disqualification from the race.

After initial clashes on Saturday, during which at least one person died and more than 100 were injured, activists joined the Abu Ismail supporters, saying that the sit-in had become unified against the SCAF, from which they demand a swift handover of power.

Tags: , , , , ,

Seven parties plan to boycott a meeting scheduled with the ruling military council to protest attacks on an Abbasseya demonstration that have left at least nine dead.

The Freedom and Justice, Wafd, Nour, Adl, Ghad al-Thawra, Egyptian Civilization and Socialist Popular Alliance parties announced separately Wednesday that they would not attend the meeting scheduled for the same day unless the violence in Abbasseya stops and the perpetrators of the attacks are brought to trial.

Mohamed Abul Ghar, the head of the Egyptian Social Democratic Party, retracted a previous decision not to attend the meeting, saying he would go to express his anger over the Abbasseya incidents and call for the trial of the assailants.

The FJP said it would hold a press conference Wednesday afternoon to explain its decision.

The Salafi-oriented Nour Party said its president, Emad Abdel Ghafour, and a few party members would head to Abbasseya Square where supporters of disqualified presidential candidate Hazem Salah Abu Ismail have been demonstrating since Friday night. The Abu Ismail supporters were later joined by other activists following initial attacks on Saturday.

Ayman Nour, another disqualified candidate and head of the Ghad al-Thawra Party, said he would not attend the meeting and that the perpetrators should stand trial and be revealed to the public before the generals convene the meeting.

Nour added that the invitation he received from the SCAF was unclear and did not include an agenda of what topics would be discussed.

Abdel Ghaffar Shokr, a leader of the Socialist Popular Alliance Party, said his party decided to boycott any meeting with the military council, and also mentioned that the meeting agenda was unspecific.

Mohamed Abdel Moneim al-Sawy, an MP from the Egyptian Civilization Party, also plans to abstain, calling for intervention to stop what he called the “bloodbath.”

Hatem Azzam, the head of the same party, said he received information that the SCAF wants to postpone the presidential election and intends to discuss the idea with party heads. In a statement, Azzam said talk about delaying the election is “playing with fire.”

He called on the SCAF to hand over power by the scheduled end-of-June deadline.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

Tags: , , , , ,