Egypt’s army-backed government warned supporters of deposed President Mohamed Morsi on Thursday to abandon their Cairo protest camps, promising them a safe exit if they gave up without a fight.
The appeal, made by Interior Ministry spokesman Hany Abdel Latif on state television, followed the government’s declaration on Wednesday it was ready to take action to end two weeks of sit-in protests by thousands of Morsi supporters at two sites.
European Union envoy Bernardino Leon, who has been trying to defuse political tensions on a trip to Cairo, said the EU would not easily accept the use of violence to break up the protest camp and that such action would have to be explained to the international community, Al-Hayat television station reported.
It quoted him as saying efforts should be made to reach a political solution by reaching out to moderates on both sides.
Since the army ousted the Islamist Morsi on July 3, police have rounded up many leaders of his Muslim Brotherhood, mostly on charges of inciting violence. The latest warnings raised the possibility of a potentially bloody showdown.
Latif said that if protesters left the sites peacefully, they would be guaranteed a safe exit. No deadline was set.
“There is no specified date. We will continue to study the situation on the ground,” Latif told Reuters.
The protesters remained defiant and prepared for the worst.
At the Rabaa al-Adawiya camp, ground was cleared of rubbish to allow easier ambulance access. Buckets of sand were placed throughout the camp to be used to extinguish teargas canisters.
Behind a barricade of bricks and sandbags, rocks had been piled up to use as ammunition.
“We are ready. We are ready to die for legitimacy. An attack can happen at any moment,” said Mohamed Saqr, a Brotherhood activist guarding an entrance to the encampment at a mosque in northeast Cairo.
Egypt is more polarised than at any time since the U.S.-backed autocrat Hosni Mubarak was toppled in 2011, starting a political transition fraught with unrest.
Morsi became Egypt’s first freely elected leader in June 2012, but faced opposition over his inability to address social and economic problems and fears that he was leading the country towards stricter Islamist control.
GLOBAL CONCERN
The new government’s transition plan envisions parliamentary elections in about six months, to be followed by a presidential vote. The Brotherhood says the army has mounted a coup against a legitimate elected leader and wants nothing to do with the plan.
The United States has refused to label Morsi’s removal a “coup”. That would trigger a cutoff in aid and could alienate it from the Egyptian military, which benefits from $1.3 billion in annual U.S. military aid.
On a visit to Pakistan on Thursday, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said the Egyptian army was “restoring democracy” when it toppled Morsi.
“The military was asked to intervene by millions and millions of people, all of whom were afraid of a descendance into chaos, into violence,” he told Pakistan’s GEO TV.
“And the military did not take over, to the best of our judgment so – so far.”
Egypt’s government was buoyed by huge pro-army rallies in response to a call by army chief General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi for Egyptians to give him a mandate to crack down on “violence and terrorism”.
Morsi has been in detention since his overthrow and faces a judicial inquiry into accusations that include murder and kidnapping. The authorities also brought formal charges on Wednesday against the Brotherhood’s three top leaders, two of whom are in custody.
The arrests, along with street violence that has killed well over 100 Morsi supporters, have fuelled global concern that the government plans to crush the Brotherhood, even though it says it wants to involve the Islamists in the transition plan.
Khaled Hanafi, general secretary of the Freedom and Justice Party, the Muslim Brotherhood’s political arm, said the interior minister was trying to terrorise the protesters.
“These statements won’t deter peaceful protesters and will only increase their determination and resolve to fulfil their demands for a return of legitimacy, and they will not leave the squares until legitimacy returns,” he said.
A prominent Salafi cleric, Sheikh Mohamed Hassan, warned the government against spilling blood.
Egypt’s biggest liberal and leftist coalition, the National Salvation Front, said it supported “all legal measures aimed at restoring security and stability”.
The group, which backed Morsi’s overthrow, said the authorities should confront what it called a “campaign of incitement and intimidation by the Brotherhood and their allies.”
A grouping of Morsi supporters calling itself the Anti-Coup Pro-Democracy Alliance said the security forces planned to foment violence as an excuse for committing a massacre. It appealed to soldiers and police not to fire on protesters.
It said the protests would continue.
“All revolutionary groups, including the Alliance, also announce that they do not recognize the coup government or its decisions or negotiations,” it said in a statement.
The prospect of a showdown appeared to undermine efforts by the European Union to negotiate a peaceful settlement.
EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton spent two days in Cairo this week and met Morsi when she was flown after dark by military helicopter to his secret place of confinement.
The visiting German foreign minister, Guido Westerwelle, urged the authorities on Thursday to avoid “the appearance of selective justice”.
But his Egyptian counterpart, Nabil Fahmy, speaking alongside him, retorted that there was no agenda of vengeance and no selective justice.
“There is law and it applies to everyone,” Fahmy said.
Any forcible action against the Morsi supporters could set off more bloodletting after security forces killed 80 Brotherhood followers on Saturday. The Brotherhood has called for a “million-man march” on Friday.
Almost 300 people have been killed in violence since Morsi’s overthrow, inspiring fears in the West of a wider conflagration in Egypt, which straddles the Suez Canal and whose 1979 peace treaty with Israel is central to U.S. policy in the Middle East.
Source:Reuters