Defiant Morsi enrages protestors

An angry Mohammed Morsi refused to call off a referendum on a disputed constitution that sparked Egypt’s worst political crisis in two years, drawing chants of “topple the regime!” from protesters who waved their shoes in contempt.

Defiant Morsi enrages protestors

An angry Mohammed Morsi refused to call off a referendum on a disputed constitution that sparked Egypt’s worst political crisis in two years, drawing chants of “topple the regime!” from protesters who waved their shoes in contempt.

The Egyptian president’s uncompromising stand came a night after thousands of his supporters and opponents fought pitched battles outside his Cairo palace, leaving at least six dead and 700 injured.

Speaking in a nationally-televised address, Mr Morsi accused some in the opposition of serving remnants of Hosni Mubarak’s authoritarian regime and vowed he would never tolerate anyone working for the overthrow of his “legitimate” government.

That brought shouts of “the people want to topple the regime!” from the crowd of 30,000 Morsi opponents – the same chant used in the protests that brought down Mubarak.

Mr Morsi also invited the opposition to a “comprehensive and productive” dialogue starting tomorrow at his presidential palace, but gave no sign that he might offer any meaningful concessions.

The opposition has already refused to engage Mr Morsi unless he first rescinds decrees giving him nearly unrestricted powers and shelves the draft constitution hurriedly adopted by his Islamist allies in a marathon session last week.

He said the referendum on the disputed charter would go ahead as scheduled on December 15 and also refused to rescind the November 22 decrees.

Reading from prepared notes, Mr Morsi frequently broke off to improvise. He wore a black tie in mourning for the six people killed in Wednesday’s clashes.

From Washington, President Barack Obama called Mr Morsi to express “deep concern” about the deaths and injuries of protesters in Egypt, the White House said last night.

The statement said Mr Obama told Mr Morsi that he and other political leaders in Egypt must make clear to their supporters that violence was unacceptable.

Mr Obama welcomed Mr Morsi’s call for a dialogue with opposition leaders but stressed that it should be without pre-conditions. The United States also has urged opposition leaders to join talks.

Mr Morsi’s troubles grew yesterday when another of his advisers quit to protest his handling of the crisis, raising to seven the number of those in his 17-person inner circle who have abandoned him. The only Christian in a group of four presidential assistants has also left.

Violence persisted into the night, with a group of protesters attacking the Cairo headquarters of Mr Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood, ransacking the ground floor. Another group of protesters attacked the Brotherhood’s offices in the Cairo district of Maadi. Outside the president’s house in his home town of Zagazig, 50 miles north of the capital, police fired tear gas to disperse hundreds of protesters.

During his speech, Mr Morsi repeated earlier assertions that a conspiracy against the state was behind his move to assume near unrestricted powers, but he did not reveal any details of the plot.

“It is my duty … to protect institutions of the nation,” he said. “I will always fulfil this role, no matter how much pressure or what the situation.”

Opposition protesters jeered and raised their shoes in contempt.

“We have two simple demands: Cancel the decrees and change the draft constitution. Other than that he can just go away,” shouted one of them, Osama El-Sayyed.

“I have no hope in this man” shouted another as thousands chanted “Erhal! Erhal!” – “Leave! Leave!” in Arabic.

Later, a photograph of Mr Morsi giving his speech was circulated on social networking sites alongside one of Mubarak addressing the nation during the 18-day uprising that toppled his 29-year rule in February 2011. Both wore black ties and dark suits.

The opposition issued a statement rejecting Mr Morsi’s offer of a dialogue and spokesman Hussein Abdel-Ghani dismissed his address.

“Tonight he proved that he is not a president for all Egyptians, but merely the representative of the Muslim Brotherhood in the presidency,” Mr Abdel-Ghani told state television.

The Egyptian army and elite Republican Guard sealed off the presidential palace yesterday with tanks and barbed wire, following the worst night of violence of the two-week crisis.

Responding to a call to “protect” the palace, thousands of Brotherhood members and other Islamists descended on the area on Wednesday, beating and chasing away around 300 opposition protesters who had been staging a peaceful sit-in. Hours of street battles followed.

“We raise Egypt’s flag but they raise the Brotherhood flag. This is the difference,” Cairo protester Magdi Farag said as he held the tri-coloured national flag stained with blood from his friend’s injury in the clashes.

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