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Egypt Islamists protest, politics hits a roadblock

CAIRO — Egypt’s new leadership wrangled over the naming of a Prime Minister, as thousands of supporters of Egypt’s ousted President Mohamed Morsi yesterday protested outside what they believed to be his place of detention in Cairo.

CAIRO — Egypt’s new leadership wrangled over the naming of a Prime Minister, as thousands of supporters of Egypt’s ousted President Mohamed Morsi yesterday protested outside what they believed to be his place of detention in Cairo.

The protests renewed fears of another round of street violence after clashes three days ago between pro- and anti-Morsi factions left at least 36 dead and more than 1,000 injured nationwide.

Demonstrators at the Republican Guard barracks shouted: “Morsi, Morsi, God is greatest!” and “Peaceful, peaceful!” as soldiers and policemen looked on from behind barbed wires.

The military said troops had been deployed to forestall new violence between the rival camps and warned against “provocative actions”. In Friday’s violence, it had sided with the anti-Morsi crowds and, in one case, opened fire on pro-Morsi demonstrators.

United States President Barack Obama on Saturday condemned the violence and said the US was not working with any particular party or group in Egypt.

The Brotherhood, which helped propel Mr Morsi to power as Egypt’s first democratically elected leader, has denounced the military’s ouster and vowed to protest until he is re-instated. The former President has been detained by the military.

In a Facebook posting yesterday, the Brotherhood’s supreme leader Mohammed Badie said the “leaders of the unconstitutional coup” were continuing “flagrant violations against the Egyptian people”.

Since Mr Morsi’s removal on Wednesday, several of the Brotherhood’s top figures have been detained, including Mr Badie’s deputy Khairat El Shater, seen as the group’s most powerful figure and main decision-maker.

Meanwhile, the collection of liberal, secular and youth groups that spearheaded the campaign to oust Mr Morsi called for a mass rally of their own yesterday in Cairo’s Tahrir Square to defend the country’s new, military-backed interim leadership.

Millions of Egyptians protested last week, demanding the leader be removed, angered by what they saw as the domination of the Brotherhood and Mr Morsi’s failures to address worsening economic woes. When the military ousted the President, it suspended the Islamist-drafted Constitution and installed Senior Judge Adly Mansour as interim President to lead the Arab world’s most populous nation.

In the interim period — whose length remains unknown — the Prime Minister would have sweeping powers to govern, while the President is expected to be a largely symbolic post.

But divisions were stalling the naming of a Prime Minister and creation of a new Cabinet.

On Saturday, Mr Mansour’s office backtracked on a decision to appoint pro-reform leader Mohamed ElBaradei as Prime Minister after an Islamist party — the ultra-conservative SalafiAl Nour — objected.

Mr ElBaradei, a Nobel Peace laureate for his time as head of the United Nations nuclear watchdog, is an inspiring figure among the leftists, secular and revolutionary youth groups behind the 2011 uprising that toppled autocrat Hosni Mubarak but is deeply distrusted as too secular among many Islamists. Agencies

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