Crackdown In Egypt Shows Shift In Military’s Approach

An Egyptian man mourns the death of a relative, shot dead after violence erupted Friday night, inside the Muslim Brotherhood field hospital in Cairo.Enlarge image i

An Egyptian man mourns the death of a relative, shot dead after violence erupted Friday night, inside the Muslim Brotherhood field hospital in Cairo.


Florian Plaucheur/AFP/Getty Images

An Egyptian man mourns the death of a relative, shot dead after violence erupted Friday night, inside the Muslim Brotherhood field hospital in Cairo.

An Egyptian man mourns the death of a relative, shot dead after violence erupted Friday night, inside the Muslim Brotherhood field hospital in Cairo.

Florian Plaucheur/AFP/Getty Images

In Egypt, protests against the ouster of President Mohammed Morsi turned deadly Saturday, after Egyptian security forces launched the most violent crackdown yet on those demonstrators.

The Egyptian Health Ministry says around 80 people were killed — most of them in Cairo. The Muslim Brotherhood, from which the deposed president hails, put the death toll at nearly twice that number. Hundreds more were injured.

The crackdown may be part of a plan to seriously weaken — if not dismantle — the Brotherhood.

The scene was chaotic at the main morgue in Cairo, where ambulance workers and emotional relatives of those killed tried to carry their bodies inside. But the morgue was full, and many of the dead remained outside in the sweltering heat. A father whose son had been killed tearfully prayed for help.

Supporters of deposed Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi attend a Friday rally in Cairo.

Basma Zahran, a lawyer the Nadim Center for the Rehabilitation of Victims of Violence, says it’s the first time she’s she seen the morgue in this state. She adds many of those killed appear to have died from gunfire.

That’s something the Egyptian government denies. But as is often the case these days, each side tells a very different story of what happened.

The Interior Minister says police used tear gas to try and disperse pro-Morsi protesters who wanted to attack their opponents at a military-sponsored rally Friday night. The Muslim Brotherhood says what happened was an unprovoked massacre of Morsi supporters, approved by the military.

From The Streets Of Cairo, First-Hand

“It was just over a year ago I walked through the streets of central Cairo and I heard people calling for the downfall of the military. The military leadership had failed them, revolutionaries said.

“It was not too long ago when activists were asking for someone to stop the military trials of civilians. Not too long ago revolutionaries filled the streets with calls for down with military rule, even in the face of beatings, detentions, death and criticizing the most popular institution in the country.

“And now Egypt has come full circle. Last night I walked through those same streets. This time Egyptians set off fireworks and cheered for military aircraft. I watched people dance in circles around a huge poster of Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi. “He is the one I trust,” the poster said.”

—NPR’s Leila Fadel

Some analysts say, unprovoked or not, the crackdown signals a disturbing shift in the military’s approach to the Brotherhood, which has a large political base in Egypt.

“This is a new and very troubling escalation, because even under the Mubarak regime, there was never a decision to destroy the Brotherhood,” says Shadi Hamid, director of research at the Brookings Doha Center.

He adds that the generals appear to want to get rid of the group and end the debate over the forcible removal of Egypt’s first democratically elected president.

“The military has decided that it can’t afford to have hundreds of thousands of people camped out in different parts of Egypt for the foreseeable future — that’s no way to run a country, in their view,” Hamid says.

Interior Minister Mohammed Ibrahim reinforced that notion at a news conference. He said police will come up with a plan to clear the streets after prosecutors complete an investigation into the pro-Morsi protests.

Ibrahim said he also reactivated much-hated security agencies that spy on Egyptians and were mothballed after Hosni Mubarak’s ouster. He claimed the absence of these agencies is why Egypt is in turmoil now.

But with the prospect of further crackdowns, the Brotherhood made it clear that it won’t go quietly. The group’s spokesman, Ahmed Aref, vowed that Morsi supporters will continue their protests and seek justice for their dead comrades.

Article source: http://www.npr.org/2013/07/27/206153198/crackdown-in-egypt-shows-shift-in-militarys-approach?ft=1&f=1001

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