President leaves through back door as protesters surround palace

Daily News Article   —   Posted on December 5, 2012

Note: This article is from the British newspaper The Daily Telegraph.

Egyptian protesters chant outside the presidential palace in Cairo on Dec 4, 2012. President Morsi left the palace as it was surrounded by up to 100,000 protesters.

(by Richard Spencer and Magdy Samaan, Daily Telegraph) CAIRO – Egypt’s presidential palace was encircled by anti-Muslim Brotherhood protesters in a violent demonstration in Cairo, as the constitutional crisis caused by President Mohammed Morsi’s assumption of unchallengeable powers showed no sign of abating.

President Morsi was forced to leave the palace through a back door as up to 100,000 people moved in to surround it on all sides. Some stones were thrown, one hitting the rear car in the president’s convoy.

Ignoring volleys of tear gas, the protesters burst through first one then a second line of police blocking the way to reach the palace, which was the site of the final act in the overthrow of former dictator Hosni Mubarak last year.

Then, as on Tuesday, demonstrators chanted: “The people want the downfall of the regime.”

There were also protests in towns and cities all over the country, including places previously unaffected. Nineteen people were injured when offices of the Freedom and Justice Party, the Muslim Brotherhood’s political front, came under attack in Minya, a city along the Nile River.

Mr. Morsi thought he had won a significant victory on Monday, when the Supreme Judicial Council [reversed] decisions by lower-ranking judges to boycott a referendum [vote] set to approve a constitution that opponents say is Islamist and fails to respect key rights. However, Tuesday night’s rally suggested opposition would continue.

“Thousands of people are joining us in this demonstration against the dictatorship of the (Muslim Brotherhood),” said Hussein Abdelghani, a spokesman for the National Salvation Front. The Front is the coalition of liberal, leftist and secular* parties led by Mohammed ElBaradei, the former United Nations Atomic Agency chief, which is organizing the protests. [*secularists believe that religion should not play a role in government, education, or other public parts of society]

“We are going to use any possible, civil means to send a message to both the president and the international community.”

As tear gas swirled overhead, Maryam Samy, 25, a telecommunications engineer, said: “The new constitution has no compromise. They want to apply their own standards of freedom, which is not freedom.

“This constitution is worse than the [former ruler] Mubarak constitution. It was better under the military – we could all rebel against the military but the Brotherhood are using the poor and religion to divide society.”

The rally provided a stark illustration of the dividing line that has cut across revolutionary Egypt. The Muslim Brotherhood also mustered hundreds of thousands to protest on Saturday, largely bussed in from the suburbs and the [Islamist] provincial towns that provide the Brotherhood’s base.

Tuesday’s crowd was younger and more modern, with hardly any of the galabiyas, traditional Egyptian male tunics, or niqabs, full face-veils, that were widely on display on Saturday. Instead there were thousands of women, many not even wearing the head-scarf, as well as fashionably dressed young men.

Many were dismissive of the Muslim Brotherhood’s supporters. Ali Sisy, the deputy editor of Masry al-Youm, one of the main [secular] newspapers, said bluntly: “This is a conflict between ignorance and civilization.”

The Brotherhood insists the [new constitution they created] contains basic rights and freedoms, including of speech and belief, as well as recognizing Egypt’s traditional, Muslim culture. It also says the referendum, set for December 15, will end Mr. Morsi’s self-proclaimed powers to act without judicial oversight on “sovereign matters.” …

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Background

MOHAMED MORSI:

EGYPT’S MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD: