The Muslim Brotherhood have declared on facebook and tweets that 36 of
their offices have been burned down since the President Morsi issued
his constitutional
decrees, some are now reporting that he is about to cancel them...
--------------------------
  Egypt's president sends messages of 'compromise' as tens of thousands
surround palace
Nada Hussein Rashwan, Sherif Tarek, Hatem Maher, Bel Trew, Nada El-Kouny,
Yasmine Wali, Saturday 8 Dec 2012
Hundreds of thousands take to streets in Cairo and cities around Egypt to
pressure President Morsi to reverse recent constitutional decree. Ahram
Online provided day-long coverage of protests, counter-protests and
reactions


Ahram Online ends its live coverage of the events an intense day in Egypt
as the country remains divided waiting for a resolution for the struggle
over the controversial presidential declaration and draft constitution. We
bid our readers good night and wish safety for everyone.



23:40 The Ministry of Interior warned the protests at the presidential
palace, held by anti-Morsi demonstrators, and the rally of the president's
supporters three miles away could be infiltrated and might spiral "out of
control". In a statement issued by its media center, the ministry called on
the participants in both congregations to go home "for the sake of the
nation."

23:25 The Ministry of Health said 11 people were injured in Friday's
protests against the constitutional declaration: three in Cairo at the
presidential palace, six at the president's home in Zagazig located in
Sharqiya governorate in the eastern Delta, and two in Behaira governorate
in the northern Delta.

23:00 Protesters have set up barricades in Marghani Street leading to the
presidential palace in the Heliopolis district in Cairo in preparation for
a sit-in, according to Al-Ahram Arabic website.

Protesters are distributing blankets to wither the chilly night in the
country's capital.

Rumors about attacks from Muslim Brotherhood supporters keep circulating,
said Ahram Online's Bel Trew. Some anti-Morsi protesters formed groups to
protect the rally at the presidential palace against "possible attacks."

Meanwhile, reinforced vehicles of the Central Security Forces are
surrounding the Brotherhood supporters congregating at in Naser City’s Raba
El-Adawiya Mosque, three miles away from the presidential palace.

Some of the officers deployed near the mosque stressed there is no way for
the Brotherhood supporters to head towards the presidential palace.

22:15 Al-Ahram Arabic website reports that hundreds or anti-Morsi
demonstrators in the northern coastal city of Alexandria ransacked the
governorate’s headquarters, expressing anger at the killing of other
protesters Thursday at the hands of what they described as "armed militias
affiliated to the Muslim Brotherhood."##

Minutes later, a group of men wielding firearms and bladed weapons chased
protesters out of the building. Fire shots were heard in the surrounding
area. No reports on injuries are available yet.

22:12 Journalist Eman Mehanna confirmed that the headquarters of the Muslim
Brotherhood’s Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) in Zagazig, Sharqiya
governorate in the eastern Delta, has been raided by protesters but police
forces have contained the situation.

Earlier on Friday, violent clashes erupted between supporters of President
Morsi, who hails from the Brotherhood, and opponents in the perimeter of
his residence in his hometown in Zagazig.

“police forces have now cordoned the area around the president’s house,
blocking thousands of protesting opponents from advancing towards it,”
Mehanna told private satellite channel OnTV. “Families of protesters who
were detained upon the clashes have joined the protest.”

The FJP said on its Facebook page Friday: “The thuggery episode continues
... Thugs have looted and vandalized the party’s office in Zagazig amid
complicity from security forces and silence from the so-called political
forces.”

20:30Leader of the opposition National Salvation Front Mohamed ElBaradei
calls on President Morsi to withdraw the constitutional declaration
“tonight” and to postpone the referendum until national consensus is
achieved.

“I ask President Morsi in the name of the Egyptian conscience to heed these
two demands tonight. I am betting on president Morsi’s patriotism,”
ElBaradei said in a live speech on private satellite channel ONTV.

21:12 Member of the National Salvation Frontand ex-MP Amr Hamzawy says in a
phone interview with private satellite channel CBC that members of the
front will meet to discuss their stance after the announcement made by
Mahmoud Mekki about Morsi’s readiness to hold off the referendum,
describing the decision as a “positive step.”

21:10 Ahram Online’s Bel Trew describes the scene at the presidential
palace right after President Morsi’s announced he is conditionally willing
to postpone the referendum on the draft constitution.

“Protesters are celebrating the postponement of the expat vote on the
constitution,” she said.

“Meanwhile, some of them are discussing fortifying the area surrounding the
presidential palace with barriers, out of fear that the Muslim
Brotherhood’s rally in Naser City’s Raba El-Adawiya Mosque [three miles
away from the presidential palace] will head towards them soon.”

21:08Egypt's vice-president Mahmoud Mekki read a presidential statement on
Friday evening stating that President Mohamed Morsi is ready to postpone
the constitution referendum.

However, "the political forces who demand the delay of the referendum must
provide guarantees that there will not be appeals [against the delay] in
courts," the statement said.

Last year's constitutional declaration, which was issued by then-ruling
military council in March 2011 after a similar referendum, stipulates that
a referendum on draft constitution must be held within 15 days of the date
at which the president receives the draft from a constituent assembly.

The controversial draft constitution was handed to president Morsi by the
outgoing constituent assembly on 1 December and the president set a
referendum on the draft for 15 December.

20:42 Rights lawyer Ragia Omran confirms on Twitter that the 139 protesters
captured on Wednesday during clashes at the presidential palace have been
ordered to be released.

20:40 Ismail Fathy, head of Mahalla's city council, denies that protesters
have attempted to create a "revolutionary council" and rule the industrial
city, located in western Delta governorate of Gharbiya.

"The demonstrations, which attracted around 3,000 people, were peaceful.
Nothing of this sort happened," he said in a phone interview with private
satellite TV channel CBC.

20:30 Head of the Supreme Electoral Commission Samir Abu El-Maati
officially confirms that the expatriate voting on the constitution
referendumhas been postponed from Saturday to Wednesday 12 December,
according to Al-Ahram Arabic website.

20:25 Mokhtar El-Ashri, senior leader of the Muslim Brotherhood’s Freedom
and Justice Party, denies the Mahalla announcement to secede.

“I was in Mahalla all day, I did not see any of this happening,” he
asserted during a phone call with private satellite channel CBC.

20:20 Thousands of protesters in the industrial city of Mahalla in the
western Delta governorate of Gharbiya have announced the city “independent”
from the state’s authority and that they will elect a “revolutionary
council” to handle the city’s affairs. Meanwhile, protesters are still
blocking entrances and exits to the city.

Political forces reportedly involved in the Mahalla rebellion include: The
Free Egyptians Party, Constitution Party, Strong Egypt Party, Egyptian
Social Democratic Party, the Popular Current and socialist activists.

20:15 The Muslim Brotherhood reported on its television channel Misr 25
that hundreds of pro-Morsi supporters are gathering three miles away from
the presidential palace in front of Raba El-Adawiya Mosque in the Nasr City
district to support the president.

20:10 Hossam Ali Ahmed, secretary-general of the Ghad El-Thawra Party led
by 2005 presidential candidate Ayman Nour, announced on his Twitter account
that the presidential office has agreed to postpone the expatriate voting
processions on the draft constitution from Saturday 8 December to Wednesday
12 December, which was the party’s condition before accepting negotiations
with President Morsi.

19:55 In a fresh swipe at opponents, the Muslim Brotherhood said they would
not let opposition “detail the path to democracy.”

“The Egyptian people will defend their democratic choice and will not let
opposition to derail path to full democracy through intimidation and
violence,” the group said on its English Twitter feed.

“If opposition is seeking change, the only way to do it through ballot box
and earning people's trust in upcoming elections. So far they have failed
miserably.”

19:50 Protesters in the industrial city of Mahalla in the western Delta
governorate of Gharbiya hung a sign on the gate of the city council that
says ‘the Front of Revolutionary Salvation’ after breaking into it,
according to journalist Caroline Kamel.

She told Ahram Online that some of the protesters outside the council, whom
she estimates at thousands, persuaded those who broke into the city council
to protest outside the building. She also said that entrances and exits of
the city have been blocked by protesters who are calling for civil
disobedience as tensions escalate.

19:40 Ahram Online’s Salma Shukrallah reportsat the presidential palace.

“Tens of thousands are celebrating entrance past the barbed wires, cheering
with drums and singing “the revolution is back again,” she said.

“Fireworks have also been shot into the air as protesters continue chanting
‘the people want the fall of the regime,’ 'leave [Erhal]'and ‘free
revolutionaries will finish their path’.

“Ultras songs are also chanted on drums. Republican guard and tanks center
the crowds peacefully.”

19:20 Journalist Caroline Kamel confirms to Ahram Online that hundreds of
protesters in the the industrial city of Mahalla in the western Delta
governorate of Gharbiya have broken into the city council.

19:15 Thousands of protesters are marching in the streets of Assiut city,
upper Egypt, chanting against the Muslim Brotherhood and President Morsi.

19:10 Ahram Online’s Salma Shukrallah reports that protesters around the
presidential palace have broken into the barbed wire surrounding the palace
and are now marching towards it. Deployed security forces did nothing to
stop them, she says. Meanwhile, reports say the presidential guard has
removed the barbed wires and allowed protesters to approach after they
began to breach it.##

19:00 Famous television presenter Wael El-Ebrashi, who works for
privately-owned satellite channel Dream TV, hits out at Salafist protesters
after they reportedly blocked entrance to the 6 October Media Production on
the outskirts of Cairo.

“We have turned to a state of militias; we will enter our studios and
continue to do our work even if that means sacrificing our lives,” he said.

“Down with Tyranny, down with the killers of young children,
revolutionaries and journalists,” El-Ebrashi chanted in Tahrir Square.

18:47 Ahram Online’s Salma Shukrallah reports that hundreds are protesting
in front of Heliopolis Court, where scores of anti-Morsi protesters have
been detained since Wednesday’s clashespending trial. The demonstrators are
chanting“down with the Brotherhood rule.”

18:40 In the city of Kom Hamada, in the nothern Delta governorate of
Beheira, violent confrontations were reported between Morsi supporters and
opposition protesters. At least 16 people have been injured so far. Clashes
began in the early evening hours after anti-Morsi demonstratorsreportedly
attempted to break into the local Muslim Brotherhood headquarters, Al-Ahram
Arabic website said.

18:30 In Tanta city, the capital of western Delta governorate of Gharbiya,
members of the Freedom and Justice Party – the Muslim Brotherhood’s
political arm – have been conducting a constitution awareness campaign,
Al-Ahram Arabic website reports. They have been visiting people at home to
promote their message.

18:19 Al-Ahram Arabic website says hundreds of opposition protesters have
blocked a main railway crossing in the industrialcity of Mahalla in the
western Delta governorate of Gharbiya, the hometown of the famous
anti-Mubarak rebellion in April in 2008.

18:15Additional presidential guard has been deployed around the
presidential palace to prevent opposition protesters from breaching the
barbed wire barrier and entering the buffer zone between them and the
security forces, Al-Ahram Arabic website reports.

18:05 Leftist rights lawyer and former presidential candidate Khaled Ali,
who is protesting at the presidential palace in Heliopolis, has told the
independent Al-Shorouk newspaper that “whoever negotiates with Morsi now is
a traitor to the revolution.”

18:00 Moving to Morsi’s hometown of Zagazig in Sharqiya governorate in the
eastern Delta, Al-Ahram Arabic website says security forces are being
deployed in anticipation of further clashes. Dozens of opposition
protesters have been throwing rocks at Morsi’s house in the town. In
response, security forces fired at least six tear gas canisters to disperse
them from the scene. El-Zagazig University Hospital has received several
cases of protesters suffering from tear gas inhalation.

17:53 Ahram Online’s Salma Shukrallah says there are tens of thousands of
opposition protesters in front of the main gate of the Heliopolis club,
which is opposite the northern entrance of the presidential palace.
Protesters are also scattered in several areas around the palace, she says.

17:40 Ahmed Nour, a member of the Revolutionary Socialists protesting
against President Morsi in front of the presidential palace, speaks to
Ahram Online’s Salma Shukrallah.

“We refuse dialogue with President Morsi because he did not respond to our
demands to reform the Constituent Assembly, cancel the constitutional
declaration and replace Prime Minister Qandil’s failed government,” the
26-year-old physician said.

“Instead, he threatened his opponents and incited his supporters against
them. The regime not only uses state institutions for oppression, it also
mobilises against the opposition with sectarian discourse."

“On Wednesday it was not the police that attacked opposition protesters, it
was the regime’s supporters. After what happened, dialogue would mean these
oppressive policies have succeeded.”

17:25 Ahram Online’s Sarah El-Rashidi asks two protesters at the
presidential palace to share their opinions and predictions for what might
happen next.

Essam Zahran, a taxi diver in his fifties, worried that there might be more
blood shed if the current standoff continues.

Meanwhile, Hala Hafez, a middle-aged protester, said she has not made up
her mind about the constitution.“I have not decided whether I will vote no
or whether I will boycott. A large number of opposition forces seem to be
toying with the idea of boycotting the referendum.”

17:17 Al-Ahram Arabic website says four people have been injured during
clashes in the northern Delta city of Kafr El-Sheikh. An estimated one
thousand opposition protesters reportedly attempted to vandalise the local
Muslim Brotherhood headquarters on Friday afternoon. Around two hundred
Muslim Brotherhood supporters appeared from a side street and hurled rocks
at the opposition demonstrators. Some fired shots into the air to disperse
the crowds. One of the injured sustained a gunshot wound to his foot.

17:10 Several thousand protesters continue to demonstrate against president
Morsi's recent decrees in Tahrir Square, the epicentre of the 2011
uprising. Protesters closed traffic in and out of the square. So far, the
presidential palace in Heliopolis has been the most prominent venue of
today’s mass protests.

17:05 Ahram Online’s Salma Shukrallah says a march consisting of thousands
of protesters arrived from Higaz Street and settled in El-Marghani Street
[leading to the palace]. Numbers are still increasing near the presidential
palace.

17:00 Medhat Al-Zahed, official spokesperson for the Popular Socialist
Alliance, tells Al-Ahram’s Arabic-language news portal: "The president is
using Mubarak's language when he speaks about conspiracies without offering
proof. He wants to continue making autocratic decisions, like the distorted
constitution. Such decisions only benefit one current in society."

16:58 Ahram Online’s Salma Shukrallah says numbers anti-Morsi protestersare
rapidly increasing near the presidential palace: “There are several
thousands at Roxy Square, El-Orouba and El-Marghani Street [all leading to
the palace]. Protesters are mainly chanting against the Supreme Guide of
the Muslim Brotherhood. ‘Bread, freedom and social justice’ was among the
chants.”

16:54President Morsi's speech was "a catastrophe that lacked a greater
vision about the current crisis," says Shaheer George, official spokesman
for liberal party Free Egyptians.

George added that the speech did not propose solutions and only proved that
the president leader for the Brotherhood only and not for all Egyptians.
The televised statement, George added, ignored the attacks and the
violations by the Brotherhood on peaceful protesters.

He also refused President Morsi’s proposal for dialogue as Morsi refused to
listen to any of the demands of opposition which "is an insult to
democracy."

16:51Protests are being held in the city of Tanta in the Nile Delta
Gharbeya governorate, following the Friday prayers at the Sayed Badawi
mosque in the city centre.


“No Brotherhood, no Salafists, this is the youth of the January 25
Revolution," protesters chanted.


16:45Meanwhile in the Nile Delta, thousands of protesters are marching from
Mansoura's Al-Nasr Mosque circling Martyr’s Square on their way towards the
governor’s offices.

16:30 Tension is rising at the presidential palace: protesters have broken
through the military-erected barbed wire barricades and are chanting “Oh
army, oh army, you are the right hand of the Brotherhood, you are cowards,"
Ahram Online’s Sara El-Rashidi reports. Some are now standing on top of the
concrete wall, built this morning by security forces.

Egyptian journalist Mohamed Abdelfattah at the scene tweets a picture of
protesters attempting to push through the lines of officers guarding the
palace:


"Stampede in direction of Republican Guard, chants by youth to break
through their ranks"


16:25Mohamed El-Qasas, a member of the supreme body of
Brotherhood-breakaway party the Egyptian Current, told Ahram's Arabic
website said that President Morsi's Thursday speech was "weird, shocking
and unpredictable."


"I felt that we were listening to the speech of the head of Freedom and
Justice Party mourning the martyrs of the Brotherhood.Unfortunately his
televised statement encourages citizens to turn against the revolutionaries
while threatening the opposition as well as creating internal strife.In
conclusion the whole speech was directed to the Brotherhood and not the
public."


16:20Back at the presidential palace, Ahram Online reporter Sara El-Rashidi
talked to engineer Sami El-Masr who explained that if Morsi had gone back
on his decree, the current crisis would have been manageable.


"He needs to listen to the people and try to acknowledge their demands to
calm the situation in the country”. El Masr added that Morsi is “belittling
the Egyptians’ intelligence."


Another protester at the scene, Mohamed Hussein a businessman tells Rashidi
that he is taking part in Friday’s protests because he wants to make the
oppositions’ numbers representative.


“I believe that Morsi’s speech was agreed upon with the army beforehand;
his only apparent concession of attempting to amend Article 6 of the
constitutional decree was not even guaranteed as it does not seem likely he
would actually amend it," Hussein added.


He believes that his speech was a clear threat to National Salvation Front
members Mohamed ElBaradei and Hamdeen Sabbahi.


“Even if a dialogue is initiated with opposition members, we know what the
outcome will be beforehand and thus it is renders useless”.


16:15Moving to the coastal city of Alexandria, Revolutionary Socialist
activist Mahienour El-Masry tells Ahram Online reporter Yassin Gaber that
there is currently a march from the Qaed Ibrahim Mosque on the city’s
corniche to towards Sidi Gaber in the north of the city.

Approximately 15,000 protesters are participating in the march,
representing a wide array of opposition groups and parties.


Protesters, responding to violence in Cairo, chant: “The regime has lost
its legitimacy, they killed our brothers and sisters at the presidential
palace”.


16:05Funerals were held at Cairo's main Al-Azhar MosqueFriday afternoon for
three Muslim Brotherhood supporters who died in Wednesday's clashes between
pro-Brotherhood groups and anti-Morsi protesters at the presidential
palace.

Dr. Abdallah Karyoony, assistant secretary-general of the Doctors'
Syndicate, at the scene told Ahram Online's Nada El-Kouny that around
50,000 protesters attended, several of which helped carry the coffins
through the crowds.


"There was a stage built near the Hosseiny Hospital adjacent to the mosque
where some public figures like the Muslim Brotherhood’s main operative in
the Constituent Assembly Mohamed El-Beltagi and prominent Salafist Sheikh
Nashaat Ahmed spoke."


Speaking about the ongoing crisis across Egypt, Karyoony said that he
believes the only way to get out of the current impasse is to call on all
national forces to unite and attempt to reach a consensus.


“While I believe that approximately 15 articles of the constitution draft
might be controversial, I do not see that there should be calls for its
complete annulment”.


He added that such criticisms can be dealt with and that “Egyptians need to
look at the bigger picture and the greater good for the country at such a
crucial time in its history.”


“The passing of the referendum is one step along that way to ensure the
stability of the country and to move forward along a logical path”.


He concluded that If the constitution passes after the referendum, there is
the opportunity to change them in parliament and discuss these criticisms.
##

16:00The Liberal Wafd Party delegation has just arrived at the presidential
palace carrying the party's green flags and logos. The group arrived in
five micro-buses and ten cars, explains Ahram Online reporter Mai Shaheen.

15:51The Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) urged Egypt's
new prosecutor-general to finish investigations into Wednesday's
presidential palace clashes, the "barbaric criminals who brutally assaulted
the lawyer Sobhi Saleh" and attacks on FJP headquarters in Suez, Ismaila,
Port Said, Alexandria, Mahalla and Cairo.

Published in a Friday statement on their official website, the Islamist
party wrote:


"Our demonstration [on Wednesday at the presidential palace] remained
peaceful for three hours, until counter-demonstrations arrived, including
opposition groups infiltrated by professional violent criminals paid by
former regime figures.It is our national responsibility to demand that
investigators do their legal duty to announce the dimensions of this
heinous plot and the names of the perpetrators and instigators of violence,
to prosecute all in fair and speedy trials.


The document also asserted that the FJP is ready for dialogue and
cooperation and that their "hearts are open to all citizens who want a real
national partnership on the basis of upholding the best interests of the
country.The group affirmed the right of everyone to the freedom of
expression, demonstration and protest, according to their "political
convictions, provided they commit to peaceful action, respect and obey
popular will."

15:45Dozens are currently protesting outside the grounds of Egyptian Media
Production City against what they say is the "incitement by the media"
towards Islamist groups. Ultra-orthodox Salafists are reportedly at the
television complex located about 30km outside of the capital, together with
supporters of former Salafist presidential contender Hazem Abu-Ismail.

15:35 Back at the presidential palace, Ahram Online reporter Mai Shaheen
describes protesters attempting to break through the barbed wire fences
erected by the military and the Republican Guard to prevent protesters from
demonstrating directly outside the palace.

The security forces implemented the curfew at 3pm Thursday and called all
groups, both supporters of the president and opposition forces, to evacuate
the area in front of the presidential building.

15:30 Participants in the Journalists' Syndicate protest outside its
downtown headquarters report that the march has left for the presidential
palace.

15:15Leftist Taggamu Party has joined opposition groups in refusing to meet
the President Mohamed Morsi during his planned Saturday meeting.


"We will not participate in any deception of the public and trust that all
democratic political forces refuse this deceiving dialogue."


The statement also expressed its surprise at Mohamed Morsi's call for talks
with his opponents after refusing the legitimate demands of the parties,
political forces, National Salvation Front, judiciaries, constitution and
legal consultants.


"President Mohamed Morsi announced in his televised speech that the project
of the Salafist and Brotherhood referendum will take place as scheduled on
15 December," the party statement read.

"The president, Brotherhood and their party are insisting on deepening the
political crisis and causing more bloodshed by the Brotherhood and Freedom
and Justice Party's militants continuous attacks on peaceful protests
against their constitution and their invalid referendum."


15:00Ahram Online journalist Mai Shaheen reports that the Rabaa Al-Adaweya
Mosque march has just reached the presidential palace, protesters chant
"peaceful, peaceful" as they join the hundreds already gathered in front of
the military barricades.

14:45A few thousand are marching through downtown Cairo’s Ramses Street
towards the presidential palace Ahram Online reporter Simon Hanna confirms.
The protest, which originated at the Nour Mosque in Abbasiya, is not
dominated by any particular party or movement Hanna says, the majority of
the banners call for the cancellation of the draft constitution.


“We just passed by the girls Catholic college in Ramses Street, and the
whole school was filled with girls cheering us on,” adds Hanna, saying that
the leader of the chants, which are calling for the end of the Brotherhood
rule, is part of the Ultras Ahlawy hardcore football fan group.


14:30Back at the presidential palace Ahram Online reporter Sarah El-Rashidi
says around 500 protesters have gathered but the numbers are building
slowly, as the marches have yet to reach the rallying point.


“There is a large diversity of people here, women, children, and older
members of the public. The banners read 'No to the Constitution' and 'No to
the Muslim Brotherhood; Egypt is not your private estate'.”


Veiled housewife Safaa Abdou, accompanied by her two children, told Aharm
Online that she believes that President Mohamed Morsi is worse than
Mubarak.


“While Mubarak stole from us, at least we were living in safety; what we
are seeing these days is similar to acts of terrorism. At this point, it is
not enough for Morsi to cancel the declaration or the referendum, but
instead we call on nothing short of his removal.”


14:15 After some deliberation the National Salvation Front headed by
Constitution Party leader Mohamed ElBaradei and presidential contenders Amr
Moussa and Hamdeen Sabbahi announced that they officially reject President
Mohamed Morsi’s invitation for national dialogue.


“We are shocked at Morsi’s blatant denial of the facts of violence and
brutality as seen by millions of Egyptians and others around the world on
television and print media.”


The front listed their key demands in the statement.

They called on the Minister of Justice Ahmed Mekki to assign a neutral
judge to lead investigations into the use of force on Wednesday outside the
presidential palace and try those responsible, regardless of what their
political and ideological affiliations are.

They also reiterated their calls for the Constitutional Declaration to be
revoked and the draft constitution and referendum to be cancelled.

In conclusion the front promised to continue all “legitimate means of
defense to get their rights and ensure their freedom” as well as affirming
they will hold peaceful protests until the president revokes his recent
decisions.

According to MENA news agency, the liberal Wafd Party also decided not to
participate in President Morsi’s Saturday talks and instead joined the
National Salvation Front’s Friday afternoon meeting.

14:00Official spokesman of the Salafist Nour Party Nader Bakkar tweets his
comments on the recent bloody events across Egypt:


"I refuse the siege of the presidential palace, constitutional court or
media city and call on everyone to control themselves, prioritise the
well-being of the country and stop the bloodshed."


13:50Back on Tahrir Square, National Salvation Front leader and Nasserist
presidential contender Hamdeen Sabbahi is addressing the crowds.

Ahram Online reporter Mai Shaheen in Tahrir says Sabbahi condemned the use
of force in demonstrations including attacking Muslim Brotherhood offices,
referencing Thursday night's torching of the Brotherhood Moqattam
headquarters in Cairo.


“We cannot accept a dictatorship”, Sabbahi said forcibly, referring to
President Mohamed Morsi's recent contentious decree and his refusal to back
down on the upcoming referendum on the constitution.##


Meanwhile on the corners of the flashpoint square, the imam leading Friday
prayers in Tahrir’s Omar Makram Mosque strongly condemned Muslim
Brotherhood attacks on opposition protesters at the presidential palace,
Ahram Online's reporter added.

13:45The marches have set off towards the presidential palace, with
hundreds moving from Tahrir Square, Mohandiseen's Mostafa Mahmoud Mosque
and Nasr City's Rabaa El-Adaweya Mosque. Meanwhile supporters of the
president flock to Al-Azhar Mosque to stage their own demonstration.

13:30Muslim Brotherhood Supreme Guide Mohamed Badie is seen preaching at
Cairo's main mosque Al-Azhar as hundreds spill on the streets outside the
gates of the building.

A funeral prayer for those killed during clashes outside the presidential
palace on Wednesday will be held after the Friday sermon.


"We will sacrifice our blood and our souls for Islam,” the gathered
worshipers chant.


13:15 As the sun rose above the Presidential Palace in the Heliopolis
suburb of Cairo, Ahram Online journalist Bel Trew spotted the military
building another security barricade in Merghani street: the scene of
Wednesday’s bloody clashes. The wall, which divides the street in half, is
part of increased security around the palace - which has been manned by the
Republican Guard since Thursday - ahead of expected protests. ##

13:00 Good afternoon, we open our live coverage of nationwide protests
against President Mohamed Morsi's decision to stick by his decree and the
constitutional referendum.

Thousands are expected to converge on the Heliopolis presidential place
from 17 venues across Cairo, Friday, in protest of President Mohamed
Morsi’s decision to stick by his controversial Constitutional Declaration
and the upcoming constitutional referendum, as announced during his
televised statement Thursday.

In the long awaited speech, Morsi blamed “infiltrators” and “third parties”
for causing the bloody clashes between Brotherhood supporters and
protesters on Wednesday night at the presidential palace, which saw seven
dead. He also accused opposition forces of “serving the interests of the
remnants of the former regime” to overthrow his legitimate rule.

The president refused to bow to the demands of opposition coalition the
National Salvation Front, who demand he rescind the Constitutional
Declaration and re-form the Constituent Assembly, saying that his recent
decisions were necessary.

However, Morsi called for Saturday talks with his opponents. This was
promptly rejected by the National Salvation Front who said that following
the recent bloodshed they could not open dialogue with the president while
he “ignores the demands of the people.”

There have been violent scenes across the country since Morsi issued his
contentious decree, as rival protest groups meet and clash. Muslim
Brotherhood and Freedom and Justice Party offices nationwide have also been
attacked: Thursday night saw the Brotherhood headquarters in Moqattam
torched by angry demonstrators.

http://english.ahram.org.eg/News/59983.aspx


http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/mursi-torture-chambers-exposed

Mursi "torture chambers" exposed
Anti-Mursi demonstrators stage a protest outside the presidential palace
near Cairo on 7 December 2012. (Photo: Mohammed Abd El Ghany)

Published Friday, December 7, 2012

Egypt’s ruling Muslim Brotherhood has set up “torture chambers” inside the
presidential palace where protesters detained over the past week have been
beaten to force confessions, the country’s *Al-Masry Al-Youm*reported
Friday.

A reporter for the newspaper claims to have been allowed access to
makeshift detention centers inside the Heliopolis Palace for three hours on
Wednesday during a wake of demonstrations against President Mohammed Mursi
where he witnessed
beatings<http://www.egyptindependent.com/news/al-masry-al-youm-goes-inside-brotherhood-s-torture-chambers?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter>
.

He wrote that he "heard detainees screaming inside the chamber. ... A
bleeding man cried, ‘I’m an educated person. I have a car. Do I look like a
thug?’"

The report added: "Some of the detainees were not able to respond to the
questions the Brotherhood interrogators screamed at them because of their
physical state. Some were bleeding profusely and severely fatigued, but
were not given medical assistance, only offered bottles of water to drink."

The reporter, Mohammed al-Garhi, allegedly took this photo of a tortured
prisoner from inside the government palace:

[image: Victim of torture at the presidential
palace]<http://www.egyptindependent.com/node/1294896>

*Al-Akhbar* cannot independently verify the allegations in the story.

Tens of thousands of protesters have been demonstrating outside the palace
since Tuesday when police attacked marchers who attempted to dismantle
barricades. They are demanding Mursi withdraw a November 22 decree granting
himself autocratic powers, and that he scrap a draft constitution grounded
in sharia.

Prisoners inside the palace detention rooms would first have their phones,
ID cards and money confiscated by authorities before being shouted at and
beaten. The interrogators would ask the detainees if they were being paid
to participate in the demonstrations, or if they belonged to an opposition
party.

If they refused to answer questions, or denied any wrongdoing or political
affiliation, "the torturers would intensify beatings and verbal abuse," the
report added.

An Egyptian rights group in October published a
report<http://ar.scribd.com/doc/109988172/%D8%AA%D9%82%D8%B1%D9%8A%D8%B1-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%AA%D8%B9%D8%B0%D9%8A%D8%A8-%D8%B9%D9%86-100-%D9%8A%D9%88%D9%85-%D9%85%D9%86-%D8%AD%D9%83%D9%85-%D9%85%D8%B1%D8%B3%D9%8A>
documenting
247 cases of police brutality, and 88 cases of torture, during Mursi's
first 100 days in office. The embattled Islamist leader took office in June.

A number of torture cases that had taken place inside police stations
resulted in death, the report found.

*(Al-Akhbar)*


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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