July 1 Photo Brief: Protests in Egypt, Brazil wins FIFA Confederations Cup, Tour de France
Protests continue in Egypt, Brazil wins FIFA Confederations Cup, bird’s eye view of the Tour de France and more in today’s daily brief.
- Protesters take part in a protest demanding that Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi resign at Tahrir Square in Cairo July 1, 2013. Egypt’s powerful armed forces gave Islamist President Mohamed Mursi a virtual ultimatum on Monday to share power, urging the nation’s feuding politicians to agree on an inclusive roadmap for the country’s future within 48 hours. (Suhaib Salem/Reuters)
- Protesters, opposing Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi, pray during a protest demanding that Mursi resign at Tahrir Square in Cairo July 1, 2013. The headquarters of Egypt’s ruling Muslim Brotherhood was overrun by youths who ransacked the building after those inside were evacuated on Monday following a night of violence that killed eight people. (Suhaib Salem/Reuters)
- Egyptian military helicopters trailing national flags circled over Tahrir Square during a protest demanding that Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi resign in Cairo July 1, 2013. Five Egyptian military helicopters trailing national flags circled over Cairo on Monday after the armed forces gave politicians 48 hours to resolve a crisis over calls for the resignation of Islamist President Mohamed Mursi. (Suhaib Salem/Reuters)
- A looter sits on a chair near other objects at the Muslim Brotherhood’s headquarters after it was damaged by protesters opposing Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi in Cairo’s Moqattam district July 1, 2013. The Brotherhood said on Monday that armed men who ransacked its national headquarters had crossed a red line of violence, and the movement was considering action to defend itself. (Amr Abdallah Dalsh/Reuters)
- U.S. President Barack Obama participates in an official arrival ceremony at Julius Nyerere Airport in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, July 1, 2013. (Jason Reed/Reuters)
- Japanese men attend a ritual purification during the annual ceremony of opening Mount Fuji for the public at Murayama Sengen Shrine on July 1, 2013 in Fujinomiya, Japan.(Buddhika Weerasinghe/Getty Images)
- A well wisher weeps as he pays his respects outside the Medi-Clinic Heart Hospital, where ailing former South African President Nelson Mandela is being treated, in Pretoria July 1, 2013. (Dylan Martinez/Reuters)
- Brazil’s forward Neymar (C) celebrates with the trophy of the FIFA Confederations Cup Brazil 2013, at the Maracana Stadium in Rio de Janeiro on June 30, 2013. Brazil won the title after defeating Spain 3-0 in the final of the football tournament. (Lluis Gene/AFP/Getty Images)
- Brazilian fans watch the FIFA Confederations Cup final football match between Brazil and Spain on a giant screen in Sao Paulo, Brazil on June 30, 2013. (Miguel Schincariol/AFP/Getty Images)
- Windu (L) and Arief sit in their extreme vespa modification during a scooter festival on June 30, 2013 in Cibeureum, about 100 km west of Jakarta, Indonesia. Hundreds of Vespa scooter enthusiasts gathered by the beach to dance, party and show their classic and extremely modified scooters. (Ed Wray/Getty Images)
- Germany’s Sabine Lisicki celebrates on the floor after beating U.S. player Serena Williams during their fourth round women’s singles match on day seven of the 2013 Wimbledon Championships tennis tournament at the All England Club in Wimbledon, southwest London, on July 1, 2013. (Ben Stansall/AFP/Getty Images)
- Border police officers sit in a patrol car as they monitor the border between Croatia and Montenegro in Vitaljina, south Croatia, April 29, 2013. Croatia became the European Union’s 28th member on July 1 and its roughly 1,400 km of land border with non-EU neighbours Bosnia, Serbia and Montenegro will now become the bloc’s new external frontier. (Antonio Bronic/Reuters)
- Fire fighters tackle a large blaze at a recycling centre in Smethwick, near Birmingham, central England July 1, 2013. Up to 200 firefighters and 40 fire engines were deployed. (West Midlands Fire Service Handout via Reuters)
- An aerial view shows the pack of riders as they cycle along the coast during the 145,5 km third stage of the centenary Tour de France cycling race from Ajaccio to Calvi, on the French Mediterranean island of Corsica July 1, 2013. (Pascal Pochard-Casabianca/Reuters)
- Jonathan Bartoletti, jockey of the Valmontone parish, rides Lo Specialista during four of six trial horse races in Del Campo square in Siena July 1, 2013. Every year on July 2 and August 16, almost without fail since the mid-1600s, 10 riders compete bareback around Siena’s shell-shaped central square in a bid to win the Palio, a silk banner depicting the Madonna and child. (Stefano Rellandini/Reuters)
- Visitors climb through the art installation ‘In Orbit’ by Tomas Saraceno of Argentina at the Kunstsammlung K21 museum in Duesseldorf June 30, 2013. (Ina Fassbender/Reuters)
- Thousands of protesters with umbrellas attend the march on July 1, 2013 in Hong Kong. Thousands of protesters march calling for universal suffrage and chanting slogans against Hong Kong Chief Executive C Y Leung when Typhoon Signal No. 3 is hoisted. (Lam Yik Fei/Getty Images)
RELATED
Egypt army gives Mursi 48 hours to share power
Asma Alsharif and Tom Perry Reuters
1:18 p.m. EDT, July 1, 2013
CAIRO (Reuters) – Egypt’s armed forces handed Islamist President Mohamed Mursi a virtual ultimatum to share power on Monday, giving feuding politicians 48 hours to compromise or have the army impose its own roadmap for the country.
A dramatic military statement broadcast on state television declared the nation was in danger after millions of Egyptians took to the streets on Sunday to demand that Mursi quit and the headquarters of the ruling Muslim Brotherhood were ransacked.
Since the fall of Hosni Mubarak more than two years ago as the Arab Spring revolutions took hold, the Arab world’s most populous nation has remained in turmoil, arousing concern amongst allies in the West and in Israel, with which Egypt has had a peace treaty since 1979.
Mursi’s backers were furious at the military statement: “The age of military coups is over,” said Yasser Hamza of the Brotherhood parliamentary wing.
But it provoked delight among liberal leaders and crowds in Cairo’s Tahrir Square, who cheered when a flight of military helicopters swooped overhead trailing national flags. Silhouetted against the sunset, it was a powerful illustration of the military’s desire to be seen in tune with the people.
“If the demands of the people are not realized within the defined period, it will be incumbent upon (the armed forces) … to announce a road map for the future,” chief-of-staff General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi said in the statement that was followed by patriotic music.
The people had expressed their will with unprecedented clarity in the mass demonstrations and wasting more time would only increase the danger of division and strife, he said.
The army said it would oversee the implementation of the roadmap it sought “with the participation of all factions and national parties, including young people”, but it would not get directly involved in politics or government.
Anti-Mursi demonstrators outside the presidential palace cheered the army statement, and the main opposition National Salvation Front, which has demanded a national unity government for months, applauded the military’s move. The army is held in high regard, especially after it helped topple Mubarak.
On Cairo’s Tahrir Square, thousands were celebrating the army’s move: “We want a new armed forces council to govern until new elections,” said accountant Mohamed Ibrahim, 50. “The army alone supports the legitimate revolutionary will of the people.”
“The invitation to meet the demands of the people within the next few hours is a historic opportunity which should not be lost,” said Amr Moussa, a liberal politician and former foreign minister who stood in last year’s presidential election.
There was no immediate reaction from the president’s office.
It was the second time in just over a week that the armed forces had issued a formal warning to the politicians, piling pressure on Mursi to concede power-sharing with the liberal, secular and left-wing opposition.
Analysts said the military intervention could serve Mursi if he wished to compromise, but it risked giving his opponents an incentive to harden their demands, sensing support from the street and the generals, at the risk of triggering a coup.
“The ultimatum has the ring of a potential coup,” said Yasser al-Shimy of the International Crisis Group think-tank.
“What makes it not a coup is it gives time for the politicians to sort out their differences.”
The second biggest Islamist group in parliament, the Nour Party, said it feared the return of army rule “in a big way”.
The armed forces have played an important role in Egyptian politics since army officers staged the overthrow of the monarchy in 1952.
SELF-DEFENSE?
After the destruction of its offices, the Brotherhood which operated underground until the overthrow of Mubarak in 2011, said it was considering how best to defend itself.
Sunday’s mass rallies were bigger than anything seen since the Arab Spring uprising. Smaller crowds returned to Tahrir Square and other gathering points on Monday afternoon.
Five non-Brotherhood government ministers tendered their resignations from the cabinet, apparently in sympathy with the protesters, underlining a sense of isolation for the party that won a series of elections last year.
“Both sides are still in their trenches,” a senior European diplomat said just before the military statement.
Eight people died in a night of fighting around the Brotherhood building, where guards fired on youths hurling rocks and fire bombs. A Brotherhood official said two of its members were hurt. Another eight people were killed and 731 injured in clashes around the country on Sunday, the health ministry said.
The Brotherhood’s official spokesman told Reuters that the attack had crossed a red line of violence and among possible responses might be to revive “self-defense committees” former during the 2011 uprising.
“The people will not sit silent,” Gehad El-Haddad said.
Mursi’s movement complained at the lack of police protection, which can only heighten its sense of being under siege from both the liberal opposition and state officialdom inherited from the old regime.
NOT TALKING
Liberal protest organizers, who declared Mursi ousted by people power on Sunday, said they hoped people would stay in the streets until Mursi left.
Mursi, who has not appeared in person, earlier renewed offers via allies of dialogue and pledged to work with a new parliament if disputes over election rules can be ironed out. But he has so far offered no substantial concessions.
The opposition does not trust the Islamist movement, which critics accuse of using a series of electoral victories to monopolize power. They want a total reset of the rules of a democracy imperfectly worked out over the past two years.
The massive protests showed that the Brotherhood has not only alienated liberals and secularists by seeking to entrench Islamic rule, notably in a new constitution, but has also angered millions of Egyptians with economic mismanagement.
Tourism and investment have dried up, inflation is rampant and fuel supplies are running short, with power cuts lengthening in the summer heat and motorists spending hours fuelling cars.
The cost of insuring government debt against default surged to record highs. Forward contracts indicated a significant fall for the pound against the dollar.
Some uniformed policemen marched among protesters in Cairo and Alexandria, chanting “the police and the people are one”, and several senior officers addressed the Tahrir Square crowd.
Adding to the failure to protect the Brotherhood headquarters, that cast doubt on whether Mursi could rely on the security forces to clear the streets if he gave the order.
The United States and the European Union have urged Mursi to share power with the opposition, saying only a national consensus can help Egypt overcome a severe economic crisis and build democratic institutions.
U.S. President Barack Obama renewed a call for Mursi and his adversaries to cooperate, just as Sisi’s statement was made.
The Pentagon, which funds the Egyptian army heavily, said it could not speculate on what was about to happen in Egypt.
(Reporting by Asma Alsharif, Alexander Dziadosz, Shaimaa Fayed, Maggie Fick, Alastair Macdonald, Shadia Nasralla, Tom Perry, Yasmine Saleh, Paul Taylor and Patrick Werr in Cairo; Writing by Paul Taylor; Editing by Alastair Macdonald and Giles Elgood)