August 13 Photo Brief: 2013 World Fencing Championships, protests in Egypt, the Berlin Wall
2013 World Fencing Championships, protests continue in Egypt, the Berlin Wall and more in today’s daily brief.
- An Indian policewoman helps her comrade who fainted during the full-dress rehearsal for India’s Independence Day celebrations in the southern Indian city of Chennai August 13, 2013. India commemorates its Independence Day on August 15. (Babu/Reuters
- An ethnic Cham woman (R) and her son dry fish at a school on the outskirts of Phnom Penh August 13, 2013. (Samrang Pring/Reuters)
- An Afghan poultry worker feeds chickens at a farm on the outskirts of Jalalabad on August 12, 2013. The war-torn country still faces poverty, unemployment and lack of infrastructure despite western aid money which has flooded Afghanistan in the 11 years since a US-led invasion toppled the hard line Islamist Taliban regime. (Noorullah Shirzada/AFP/Getty Images)
- A long exposure image showing a Perseids meteor (L) streaking across the night sky over St. Ioan medieval church near the village of Potsurnentsi, late on August 12, 2013. The Perseid meteor shower occurs every year in August when the Earth passes through the debris and dust of the Swift-Tuttle comet. (Dimitar Dilkoff/AFP/Getty Images)
- Germany’s Malte Mohr competes in the men’s pole vault final at the 2013 IAAF World Championships at the Luzhniki stadium in Moscow on August 12, 2013. (Franck Fife/AFP/Getty Images)
- Synchronized acrobats jump from heights of seven, eight 15 and 23 meters into a water basin at a theme park in Geiselwind, southern Germany, on August 13, 2013. (Daniel Karmann/AFP/Getty Images)
- A multi-exposure photo shows Italy’s Andrea Baldini (R) fighting with Race Imboden (L) of the US during the men’s team foil competition at the 2013 World Fencing Championships in Budapest on August 12, 2013. The team of Italy won the gold medal, the US took silver, France placed third. (Attila Kisbenedk/AFP/Getty Images)
- Members of the Reog Ria Kelana Muda group prepare for their performance on August 13, 2013 in Yogyakarta, Indonesia. Reog is a traditional Indonesian dance which originated on Java Island and performed as part of the Eid Al-Fitr celebrations which mark the end of Ramadan. The dancers have reported becoming possessed by magical powers and supernatural spirits during the performance. (Ulet Ifansasti/Getty Images)
- Children shelter in a classroom following heavy rains in Omdurman on August 13, 2013. The number of people affected by this month’s flooding which started on August 1st in Sudan has climbed to around 150,000 and is expected to rise further, the United Nations said, with more than half the victims, 84,000, in the area around the capital Khartoum. (Ashraf Shazly/AFP/Getty Images)
- Indian beach goers are pictured behind a sand sculpture created by sand artist Sudersan Pattnaik ahead of the country’s Independence Day at Puri sea beach, some 65 kilometers from Bhubaneswar, on August 13, 2013. India celebrates its 66th independence anniversary from British rule on August 15. (Stringer/AFP/Getty Images):
- Men use their mobile phones as they stand in front of a mosaic depicting former Soviet leader Vladimir Lenin at Biblioteka Imeni Lenina metro station in Moscow August 13, 2013. (Lucy Nicholson/Reuters)
- Ultra-Orthodox Jewish men walk during a demonstration on August 13, 2013 in Beit Shemesh, Israel. Around a hundred Jews protested against the construction of a new housing unit on the site which they belive will be located on ancient Jewish graves. (Lior Mizrahi/Getty Images)
- A US Airways jet taxies at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport August 13, 2013 in Arlington, Virginia. The U.S. Justice Department, and attorneys general from six states, filed legal actions today attempting to prevent the planned merger of US Airways and American Airlines as a violation of antitrust law. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)
- People stand on a roof while members of the Muslim Brotherhood and supporters of Egypt’s ousted president Mohammed Morsi take part in a sit-in protest outside the Rabaa al-Adawiya mosque in Cairo on August 12, 2013. Egypt’s judiciary extended ousted president Mohamed Morsi’s detention as his supporters marched through Cairo in defiance of the expiry of a government ultimatum to dismantle their huge protest camps. (Khaled Desouki/AFP/Getty Images)
- This file picture taken on August 26, 1961 shows men on the western side of the Berlin Wall talk to their girlfriends behind a fence at the train station Stettiner Bahnhof in Berlin, Germany. On the morning of August 13, 1961, East Berliners woke to find soldiers had blocked off the streets, cut off rail links and begun building a wall of barbed wire and cemented paving stones which over the years, in Berlin, grew in height and complexity over 96 miles. (Gunter Bratke/AFP/Getty Images)
- An actress splashes red paint on herself during a protest by Grupo Fazendo Certo (Group Doing Right) and non-governmental organization (NGO) Rio de Paz (Rio of Peace) in support of victims of violence, in front of the Rio de Janeiro State Assembly August 13, 2013. According to Rio de Paz, 35,000 victims of violence have been missing in the Rio de Janeiro state since 2007. (Sergio Moraes/Reuters)
- Three minipigs stand in their enclosure at the zoo in Hanover, central Germany, on August 13, 2013. Minipig mother Marianne gave birth to ten baby minipigs on July 20, 2013 at the zoo. (Jochen Luebke/AFP/Getty Images)
- A couple drinks a cup of latte with their picture printed on top of the milk foam at a Family Mart in Taipei August 13, 2013. As part of Qixi Festival celebrations, customers of Family Mart’s Let’s Cafe were given the complimentary service of getting their pictures printed with edible inks on their lattes, according to a Family Mart employee. (Pichi Chuang/Reuters)
Backers, foes of ousted Egypt leader battle in Cairo streets
Tom Finn and Tom Perry, Reuters
1:13 p.m. EDT, August 13, 2013
CAIRO (Reuters) – Supporters and opponents of ousted President Mohamed Mursi battled in the streets of downtown Cairo on Tuesday, showing Egypt remained dangerously split six weeks after the army overthrew him in response to mass unrest against his rule.
As demonstrators hurled rocks at each other and police fired volleys of tear gas, an initiative by Al-Azhar, a top religious authority, to resolve the crisis appeared to inch forward.
The Nour Party, the second biggest Islamist group, forecast that Al-Azhar-backed talks in pursuit of a solution would happen very soon while Mursi’s Muslim Brotherhood signaled it was ready to take part as long as they were on the right terms.
Brotherhood protest camps in Cairo’s al-Nahda Square and around Rabaa al-Adawiya mosque are the immediate focus of the crisis. Mursi backers stood firm behind barricades on Tuesday as Egypt’s interim leaders debated how to end their sit-in.
No police crackdown appeared imminent despite frequent warnings from the army-installed government that the protesters should pack up and leave peacefully.
But clashes broke out in central Cairo when a few thousand Mursi supporters marched to the Interior Ministry.
Pro-army residents and shopworkers taunted them, calling them terrorists and saying they were not welcome. They then threw stones at the marchers, getting showered back in return.
Some hurled bottles at the Mursi supporters from balconies. Police then fired tear gas at the demonstrators. Women and children marchers fled the scene in panic. The clashes spread to several streets and brought Cairo traffic to a standstill.
“There’s no going forward with negotiations, the only way is back. Mursi must be reinstated,” said Karim Ahmed, a student in a blue hard-hat who waved a picture of Mursi as he flung rocks at a ministry building.
Mursi took office in June 2012 as Egypt’s first freely elected leader following the overthrow of long-time strongman Hosni Mubarak in a popular uprising the previous year.
But he failed to get to grips with a deep economic malaise and worried many Egyptians with his apparent efforts to tighten Islamist rule of the most populous Arab nation despite its social diversity.
The army removed him amid huge demonstrations against his rule. Mursi and other Brotherhood leaders are now in detention.
Foreign mediators say the Brotherhood must accept that Mursi will not be restored. At the same time, the authorities must bring the Brotherhood back into the political process, they say.
Since Mursi was forced out, the army has installed a new administration led by Adli Mansour, a judge. In a shakeup with echoes of the past, he swore in at least 18 new provincial governors on Tuesday, half of them retired generals.
“It is Mubarak’s days,” prominent blogger Alaa Abd El Fattah wrote on his Twitter feed. “Down down with every Mubarak. Sisi is Mubarak,” he added, referring to General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, the army chief who deposed Mursi.
Yasser El-Shimy, Egypt analyst with the International Crisis Group, said it was a partial return to the status quo ante.
“This move would likely play into Islamist accusations that the new regime is an attempt at reviving the old one,” he said.
PEACE INITIATIVE
The Brotherhood suggested on Tuesday it would be willing to join a meeting called by Al-Azhar, whose initiative is the only known effort to end the crisis peacefully following the collapse of international mediation last week.
“If they stick to the rules we’re asking for, yes,” Brotherhood spokesman Gehad el-Haddad said, adding that talks must be based on the “restoration of constitutional legitimacy”.
But the Brotherhood would oppose proposals made by Al-Azhar’s Grand Sheikh Ahmed el-Tayeb because he had supported the army’s overthrow of Mursi, Haddad said. He said there had been contacts with other Al-Azhar officials.
Nour leader Younes Makhyoun said his party had been invited to the Al-Azhar talks and he expected the meeting to take place “very soon”.
“Currently the noble al-Azhar is trying to bring together for discussions those who have drawn up initiatives to agree, for example, on one initiative and vision, which we will use to pressure all the parties, so they accept it,” he told Reuters.
The effort, however, was being complicated by the friction between the Brotherhood and al-Azhar, he said.
The government has its own plan for elections beginning with a parliamentary vote in about five months. But for now it is wrestling with the difficult issue of how to tackle the protest camps.
Some officials wish to avoid a bloody showdown, which would damage the government’s efforts to present itself as legitimate, while hardliners in the army and security forces fear they are losing face to the Brotherhood and want to move in.
More than 300 people have already died in political violence since Mursi’s overthrow on July 3, including dozens of his supporters killed by security forces in two separate incidents.
The state-run al-Ahram newspaper reported that after a National Security Council meeting on Monday night, security forces were likely to cordon off the camps rather than take a more forceful approach that could lead to bloodshed.
A senior security source told al-Ahram that security had been bolstered around the camps to prevent weapons getting in.
Senior Brotherhood politician Farid Ismail said he did not expect the Interior Ministry to break up the encampments by force because of the likely casualty toll.
“It would be a big crime in addition to the crimes already committed, because it will result in a great cost in terms of massacres and dead,” he said. “There are very large numbers, complete families, men, wives, children.”
Also on Tuesday, a court set September 7 as the start of another case brought against Mursi’s allies, including prominent politician Mohamed el-Beltagi, on charges of kidnapping and torturing two members of the security forces.
(Writing by Angus MacSwan in Cairo; Editing by Mark Heinrich)