by NTEB News Desk
Arab Spring meets the winter of discontent
Egyptian
President Mohamed Morsi defended his latest decree granting himself
sweeping powers before supporters in Cairo as anti-Morsi demonstrators
set fire to Muslim Brotherhood offices in cities across Egypt on Friday.
Protesters
storm an office of Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi's Muslim
Brotherhood Freedom and Justice party and set fires in the Mediterranean
port city of Alexandria. State TV says Morsi opponents also set fire to
his party's offices in the Suez Canal cities of Suez, Port Said and
Ismailia. Photograph: Amira Mortada/AP
As
enraged demonstrators torched Muslim Brotherhood offices in several
Egyptian cities, a defiant Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi defended his
recent decree granting himself sweeping powers before a crowd of supporters outside the presidential palace in Cairo Friday.
"Political
stability, social stability and economic stability are what I want and
that is what I am working for," said Morsi. "I have always been, and
still am, and will always be, God willing, with the pulse of the people,
what the people want, with clear legitimacy" he said from a podium
before thousands of supporters.
Morsi’s
speech came a day after he issued a presidential decree stating that
any challenges to his decrees, laws and decisions were banned.
Reacting to the decree, thousands of demonstrators gathered in Cairo’s Tahrir Square on
Friday, responding to calls by Egyptian opposition leaders for a
“million-man march” to protest against what they called a “coup” by the
Islamist president.
Reporting
from Tahrir Square, FRANCE 24’s Alexander Turnbull said the crowds
started pouring into Cairo’s most symbolic square in the afternoon and
that the numbers kept swelling as the Friday noon prayers ended.
'Furious' crowds
“They’re furious about Morsi’s new far-reaching powers,” explained Turnbull. “They accuse him of placing himself above the judiciary.”
At
the same time, supporters of the Egyptian president gathered outside
Cairo’s Heliopolis Presidential Palace, some of them holding photographs
of Morsi.
The
rival demonstrations – which took place in several Egyptian cities
Friday – exposed the deep divisions in the world’s most populous Arab
nation five months after Morsi was elected with a 51% sliver of a
majority.
Clashes
between pro-and anti-Morsi demonstrators broke out in the northern port
city of Alexandria, as well as Port Said and Ismailia. Offices of the
Freedom and Justice Party – the political wing of the Muslim Brotherhood
– were attacked in several cities – including the second-largest city
of Alexandria. source - France 24
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