Supporters of ousted Egypt’s former Islamist president have again taken
to the streets to protest his removal. This comes despite a government
warning that their protest camps would be broken up. Thousands
supporters of former President Mohammed Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood
marched through the streets of Cairo after leaving mosques where they
had attended Friday prayers. They later assembled at a number of
locations, calling for the reinstatement of what they described as
Egypt's democratically elected president and government, which was
ousted by the military a month ago. Instead of abandoning already
existing protest camps, as demanded by the civilian government that the
military has installed, Morsi's supporters defied the order, by starting
a sit-in at at least one new location, near Cairo's international
airport. The AFP news agency also reported that police had used tear
gas to try to break up a new protest camp outside a compound where
television stations are located. On the diplomatic front, meanwhile, US
Under Secretary William Burns arrived in the Egyptian capital on Friday,
in a bid to convince Morsi's supporters and the military-installed
interim government to resolve their differences through dialogue. Burns'
arrival in Cairo comes on the heels of trips to the country earlier
this week by German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle and the European
Union's foreign policy coordinator, Catherine Ashton. It also comes a
day after US Secretary of State John Kerry angered Morsi's supporters by
appearing to express support for the military takeover. 'The military
was asked to intervene by millions and millions of people, all of whom
were afraid of a descendance into chaos, into violence,' Kerry told the
Pakistani broadcaster Geo on Thursday. 'And the military did not take
over, to the best of our judgement - so far. To run the country, there's
a civilian government. In effect, they were restoring democracy.' A
spokesman for Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood denounced Kerry's comments,
accusing the US of being 'complicit' in what the US has refused to call a
military coup. The July 3 removal of Morsi's government has further
deepened a split in the country, with the deaths of than 200 people,
mostly Muslim Brotherhood supporters, in street clashes since then.
pfd/jr (dpa, Reuters, AFP, AP)

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