Church
Protests in Cairo Turn Deadly
By DAVID
D. KIRKPATRICK
CAIRO — A
demonstration by Christians angry about a recent attack on a church touched off
a night of violent protests here against the military council now ruling Egypt,
leaving 24 people dead and more than 200 wounded in the worst spasm of violence
since the ouster of President Hosni Mubarak in February.
The
sectarian protest appeared to catch fire because it was aimed squarely at the
military council that has ruled Egypt since the revolution, at a moment when
the military’s latest delay in turning over power has led to a spike in public
distrust of its authority.
When the
clashes broke out, some Muslims ran into the streets to help defend the
Christians against the police, while others said they had come out to help the
army quell the protests in the name of stability, turning what started as a
march about a church into a chaotic battle over military rule and Egypt’s
future.
Nada
el-Shazly, 27, who was wearing a surgical mask to deflect the tear gas, said
she came out because she heard state television urge “honest Egyptians” to turn
out to protect the soldiers from Christian protesters, even though she knew
some of her fellow Muslims had marched with the Christians to protest the
military’s continued hold on power.
“Muslims
get what is happening,” she said. The military, she said, was “trying to start
a civil war.”
Thousands
filled the streets of downtown, many armed with rocks, clubs or machetes.
Witnesses said several protesters were crushed under military vehicles and the
Health Ministry said that about 20 were undergoing surgery for bullet wounds.
Protesters
responding to the news reportedly took to the streets in Alexandria as well.
The
protest took place against a backdrop of escalating tensions between Muslims
and Coptic Christians, who make up about 10 percent of the population.
Christians had joined the pro-democracy protests in large numbers, hoping for
the protections of a pluralistic, democratic state, but a surge in power of
Islamists has raised fears of how much tolerance majority rule will allow.
But the
most common refrain of the protests on Sunday was, “The people want to bring
down the field marshal,” adapting the signature chant of the revolution to call
for the resignation of the military’s top officer, Field Marshal Mohamed
Hussein Tantawi.
“Muslims
and Christians are one hand,” some chanted.
The
military and riot police, on the other hand, appeared at some points to be
working in tandem with Muslims who were lashing out at the Coptic Christians.
As security forces cleared the streets around 10 p.m., police officers in riot
gear marched back and forth through the streets of downtown alongside a swarm
of hundreds of men armed with clubs and stones chanting, “The people want to
bring down the Christians,” and, later, “Islamic, Islamic.”
“Until
when are we going to live in this terror?” asked a Christian demonstrator who
gave his name only as John. “This is not the issue of Muslim and Christian,
this is the issue of the freedom that we demanded and can’t find.”
By the end
of the night, as clouds of tear gas floated through the dark streets and the
crosses carried by the original Christian demonstrators had disappeared, it
became increasingly difficult to tell who was fighting whom.
At one
point, groups of riot police officers were seen beating Muslim protesters, who
were shouting, in Arabic, “God is Great!” while a few yards away other Muslims
were breaking pavement into rocks to hurl in the direction of a group of
Christians.
“It is
chaos,” said Omar el-Shamy, a Muslim student who had spent much of the
revolution in Cairo’s Tahrir Square and returned again to help support the
Christians against the military. “I was standing with a group of people and
suddenly they were chanting with the army! I don’t know what is going on.”
State
television announced a curfew in downtown Cairo beginning at 2 a.m., and the
civilian cabinet, which serves under the military council, said that a
committee headed by Prime Minister Essam Sharaf was meeting to address the
crisis. The cabinet said it would not allow any interference with “national
unity” or “the path of the democratic transition,” noting that a first step,
the registration of parliamentary candidates for elections Nov. 28, will begin
Wednesday.
“What’s
happening is not sectarian tension,” Mr. Sharaf said in a telephone interview
with state television. “It is an escalating plan for the fall and fragmentation
of the state. There’s a feeling of a conspiracy theory to keep Egypt from
having the elections that will lead it to democracy.”
Echoing
the Mubarak government’s propaganda, he added, “There are hidden hands involved
and we will not leave them."
Public
patience with both street protests and military rule has grown increasingly
thin. The military, initially celebrated as the savior of the revolution for
ushering Mr. Mubarak out the door, has become a subject of public ire both for
its failure to establish stability and for its repeated deferrals of its
pledged exit from power.
In a
timetable laid out last week, the military’s top officers said they expected to
finish parliamentary elections by March but wait for the subsequent drafting
and ratification of a constitution before holding a presidential election. That
schedule could leave the military as an all-powerful chief executive for
another two years or more. Newspapers and talk shows, once cowed by the
military’s threats to censor any perceived insult, have begin openly debating
whether the military will follow through on its commitments to democracy.
Where
previous Christian demonstrations here appealed to the military for protection
against radical Islamists, Sunday’s demonstration began from the start as a
protest against the military’s stewardship of the government.
Christians
who marched from the neighborhood of Shubra to the radio and television
building to protest the partial dismantling of a church near the southern city
of Aswan, said that they scuffled at least three times with neighbors who did
not want them to pass.
But the
violence did not escalate until they joined another demonstration at the radio
and television headquarters around 6 p.m. Demonstrators and plainclothes
security forces began throwing rocks at each other.
State news
media reported that at least three security officers had died in attacks by
Christian protesters, though those accounts could not be confirmed. The
protesters did not appear to be armed and they insisted they were peaceful
until they were attacked.
In
retaliation, military vehicles began driving into protesters, killing at least
six, including one with a crushed skull, several witnesses said. Some said they
saw more than 15 mangled bodies. Photographs said to depict some of them
circulated online.
Father
Ephraim Magdy, a priest fleeing the tear gas, said he saw soldiers fire live
bullets at protesters, and showed a journalist two bullet shells. “It is up to
the military to explain what happened, but I see it as persecution,” he said.
“I felt that they were monsters. It’s impossible for them to be Egyptians, let
alone members of the army that protected the revolution.”
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