Death toll soars to 638 in Egypt violence
17 Aug wtop.com
Weeping relatives in search of loved ones uncovered the faces of the
bloodied, unclaimed dead in a Cairo mosque near the smoldering epicenter
of support for ousted President Mohammed Morsi, as the death toll soared
past 600 Thursday from Egypt's deadliest day since the Arab Spring
began.
World condemnation widened for the bloody crackdown on Morsi's mostly
Islamist supporters, including an angry response from President Barack
Obama, who canceled joint U.S.-Egyptian military maneuvers.Violence
spread Thursday, with government buildings set afire near the pyramids,
policemen gunned down and scores of Christian churches attacked.
As turmoil engulfed the country, the Interior Ministry authorized the
use of deadly force against protesters targeting police and state
institutions.
The Muslim Brotherhood, trying to regroup after the assault on their
encampments and the arrest of many of their leaders, called for a mass
rally on Friday in a challenge to the government's declaration of a
monthlong state of emergency and a dusk-to-dawn curfew.
At least 638 people were confirmed killed and nearly 4,000 wounded in
the violence sparked when riot police backed by armored vehicles,
snipers and bulldozers smashed the two sit-ins in Cairo where Morsi's
supporters had been camped out for six weeks to demand his
reinstatement.
It was the deadliest day by far since the 2011 popular uprising that
overthrew autocratic ruler Hosni Mubarak and plunged the country into
more than two years of instability.
Also on Thursday, The United Nations Security Council called on both
the Egyptian government and the Muslim Brotherhood to exercise “maximum
restraint” and end the violence spreading across the country. Council
members called for national reconciliation.
The Health Ministry said that 288 of those killed were in the largest
protest camp in Cairo's Nasr City district, while 90 others were slain
in a smaller encampment at al-Nahda Square, near Cairo University.
Others died in clashes that broke out between Morsi's supporters and
security forces or anti-Morsi protesters elsewhere in the Egyptian
capital and other cities.
Mohammed Fathallah, the ministry spokesman, said earlier that the
blood-soaked bodies lined up in the El Iman mosque in Nasr City were not
included in the official death toll. It was not immediately clear if the
new figures included the ones at the mosque.Inside the
mosque-turned-morgue, the names of the dead were scribbled on white
sheets covering the bodies, some of them charred, and a list with 265
names was plastered on the wall. Heat made the stench from the corpses
almost unbearable as the ice brought in to chill the bodies melted and
household fans offered little relief.
Weeping relatives filled the mosque courtyard and spilled into the
streets. In a corner, a woman cradled the head of a slain man in her
lap, fanning it with a paper fan.
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