Wednesday, May 2, 2012

VOA News: Middle East: Pre-Election Violence Kills at Least 11 in Egypt

VOA News: Middle East
Middle East Voice of America
Pre-Election Violence Kills at Least 11 in Egypt
May 2nd 2012, 13:24

Pre-election violence has erupted in Cairo, triggering street battles that killed at least 11 people and prompting several presidential candidates to suspend their campaigns.

Egyptian medical and security sources confirmed the death toll in Wednesday's fighting, which began at dawn when assailants raided a site where hundreds of people protesting against the military-led government had camped since Saturday.

The mostly Islamist activists fought back against the assailants, whose identities were unknown. Witnesses say both sides attacked each other with firebombs and stones. Gunfire also was heard at the scene.

Government response

Egypt's military rulers initially did not intervene in the fighting. They sent in troops and armored vehicles to separate the two sides after several hours.

Prominent presidential candidate Mohamed Mursi of the Muslim Brotherhood said he was suspending his campaign for two days in solidarity with the victims of the violence. An adviser to another candidate Islamist candidate told the Reuters news agency that Abdel Moneim Abol Fotouh also suspended his campaign in response to the unrest.

Egypt's presidential election is due to begin on May 23. It will be the first such vote since a popular uprising ousted longtime autocratic leader Hosni Mubarak in February 2011.

Protesters' demands

The protesters outside the defense ministry have been demanding an immediate end to military rule in Egypt.

Many of them are Islamists who were angered by the ruling military's decision to bar ultraconservative Islamist cleric Hazem Abu Ismail from standing in the presidential vote. Egypt's election commission disqualified Abu Ismail because his mother had taken joint U.S. citizenship.

Some liberal pro-democracy activists had joined the Islamists at the encampment in calling for Egypt's ruling generals to step down immediately. The ruling military council has promised to hand power to a newly-elected president by July 1st.

Some information for this report was provided by AP, AFP and Reuters.

Join the conversation on our social journalism site -
Middle East Voices
. Follow our Middle East reports on
Twitter and discuss them on our Facebook page.

You are receiving this email because you subscribed to this feed at blogtrottr.com.

If you no longer wish to receive these emails, you can unsubscribe from this feed, or manage all your subscriptions

No comments:

Post a Comment