http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/15/world/middleeast/egypt.html?ref=global-home&_r=1&pagewanted=all&;

Hundreds Die as Egyptian Forces Attack Islamist Protesters

By DAVID D. 
KIRKPATRICK<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/k/david_d_kirkpatrick/index.html>Published:
August 14, 2013
CAIRO — Egyptian security officers stormed two encampments packed with
supporters of the ousted president, Mohamed Morsi, on Wednesday in a
scorched-earth assault that killed hundreds, set off a violent backlash
across Egypt and underscored the new government’s determination to crush
the Islamists who dominated two years of free elections.

The attack, the third mass killing of Islamist demonstrators since the
military ousted Mr.
Morsi<http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/04/world/middleeast/egypt.html>
six
weeks ago, followed a series of
governmentthreats<http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/08/world/middleeast/egypt.html>.
But the scale — lasting more than 12 hours, with armored vehicles,
bulldozers, tear gas, birdshot, live ammunition and snipers — and the
ferocity far exceeded the Interior Ministry’s promises of a gradual and
measured dispersal.

At least one protester was incinerated in his tent. Many others were shot
in the head or chest, including some who appeared to be in their early
teens, including the 17-year-old daughter of a prominent Islamist leader,
Mohamed el-Beltagy. At a makeshift morgue in one field hospital on
Wednesday morning, the number of bodies grew to 12 from 3 in the space of
15 minutes.

“Martyrs, this way,” a medic called out to direct the men bringing new
stretchers; the hems of women’s abayas were stained from the pools of blood
covering the floor.

Adli 
Mansour<http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/04/world/middleeast/Egypts-new-leader-may-only-be-figurehead-experts-say.html>,
the figurehead president appointed by Gen. Abdul-Fattah el-Sisi, declared a
state of emergency, removing any limits on police action and returning
Egypt to the state of virtual martial law that prevailed for three decades
under President Hosni Mubarak. The government imposed a 7 p.m. curfew in
most of the country, closed the banks and shut down all north-south train
service.

The Muslim Brotherhood, the main Islamist group behind Mr. Morsi,
reiterated its rejection of violence but called on Egyptians across the
country to rise up in protest, and its supporters marched toward the camps
to battle the police with rocks and firebombs.

Clashes and gunfire broke out even in well-heeled precincts of the capital
far from the protest camps, leaving anxious residents huddled in their
homes and the streets all but emptied of life. Angry Islamists attacked at
least a dozen police stations around the country, according to the state
news media, killing more than 40 police officers.

And they lashed out at Christians, attacking or burning seven churches,
according to the interior minister. Coptic Christian and human rights
groups said the number was far higher.

The crackdown followed six weeks of attempts by Western diplomats to broker
a political resolution that might persuade the Islamists to abandon their
protests and rejoin a renewed democratic process despite the military’s
removal of Mr. Morsi, Egypt’s first freely elected president. But the
brutality of the attack seemed to extinguish any such hopes.

The Health Ministry said that 235 civilians had been killed and more than a
thousand others had been wounded across Egypt. But the rate of dead and
seriously injured people moving through the field hospitals at the sit-ins
seemed to promise the true numbers would be much higher.

The assault prompted the resignation of the interim vice president, Mohamed
ElBaradei, a Nobel Prize-winning former diplomat who had lent his
reputation to selling the West on the democratic goals of the military
takeover.

“We have reached a state of harder polarization and more dangerous
division, with the social fabric in danger of tearing, because violence
only begets violence,” Mr. ElBaradei wrote in a public letter to the
president. “The beneficiaries of what happened today are the preachers of
violence and terrorism, the most extremist groups,” he said, “and you will
remember what I am telling you.”

The violence was almost universally criticized by Western governments. A
spokesman for President Obama said the United States was continuing to
review the $1.5 billion in aid it gives Egypt annually, most of which goes
to the military. The spokesman, Josh Earnest, said the violence “runs
directly counter to pledges from the interim government to pursue
reconciliation” with the Islamists.

He said the United States condemned the renewal of the emergency law and
urged respect for basic rights like the freedom of assembly and peaceful
demonstrations. But he stopped short of writing off the interim government,
saying the United States would continue to remind Egypt’s leaders of their
promises and urge them “to get back on track.”

Analysts said the attack was the clearest sign yet that the Egyptian police
state was re-emerging in full force, overriding liberal cabinet officials
like Mr. ElBaradei and ignoring Western diplomatic pressure and talk of
cutting financial aid.

“This is the beginning of a systematic crackdown on the Muslim Brotherhood,
other Islamists and other opponents of a military coup,” said Emad Shahin,
a professor of political science at the American University in Cairo.

“In the end,” he added, “the West will back the winning side.”

The attack began about 7 a.m. when a circle of police officers began firing
tear gas at the protest camps and obliterating tents with bulldozers.
Although the Interior Ministry had said it would move only gradually and
leave a safe exit, soon after the attack began several thousand people
appeared trapped inside the main camp, near the Rabaa al-Adawiya mosque, as
snipers fired down on those trying to flee and riot police officers with
tear gas and birdshot closed in from all sides.

“There is no safe passage,” said Mohamed Abdel Azeem, 25, a wholesaler, who
had braved sniper fire to reach a field hospital.

For a time in the late afternoon, the Islamists succeeded in pushing the
police back far enough to create an almost safe passage to a hospital
building on the edge of what remained of their camp. Only a roughly 20-yard
stretch in front of the hospital doors was still vulnerable to sniper fire
from above, and a series of Islamist marchers from around the city flowed
back into the encampment, bolstering its numbers.

But shortly before dusk, soldiers and police officers renewed their push,
and the Islamists were forced at last to flee.

Three journalists were reportedly killed in the fighting: a cameraman for
Sky News, the Britain-based news network; a reporter for a newspaper based
in the United Arab Emirates; and a reporter for an Egyptian state
newspaper. Several others were arrested.

Egyptian state news media played down the violence, reporting that the
police were clearing the camps “in a highly civilized way.” In a televised
address, Mohamed Ibrahim, interior minister under Mr. Morsi and now under
the new government, said his forces “insisted on maintaining the highest
degrees of self-restraint.”

Later, state television showed footage of a group of dead bodies it said
were discovered under the main stage of the Islamist sit-in, corroborating
dark rumors in the anti-Islamist news media. But it appeared to be a
gruesome setup: journalists, including a reporter for The New York Times,
had visited the area below the stage repeatedly in recent days and found it
empty, without any bodies. Although journalists saw at least a few
Islamists with guns on Wednesday, there was also no evidence that the
Islamists had stockpiled large numbers of weapons inside the camp, as
Egyptian state news media had said before the attack.

But in a televised statement, Hazem el-Beblawi, the interim prime minister
and a Western-trained economist who had been considered a liberal, cited
the Islamists’ supposed stockpiling of weapons and ammunition to argue that
the use of force was justified to protect the rights of other citizens.

“Things were spiraling out of control, and we decided to take a firm
stance,” he said.

By nightfall the Islamists had established new sit-ins outside a landmark
mosque in Cairo and others in cities around the country, defying the new
curfew and the interior minister’s vows to break up any such assemblies.

“Is this closer to being resolved tonight than last night?” asked Michael
Wahid Hanna, a researcher on Egypt with the New York-based Century
Foundation who was visiting Cairo. “Obviously not. I don’t think anybody
has thought this through fully.”

Mayy El Sheikh contributed reporting.

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Peace Is Doable

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