Egyptian student dies during protests at campus
CAIRO — Riot police
moved into Egypt’s main Islamic university on Saturday, firing tear gas and
breaking up a strike by students that threatened to disrupt midterms. One
student was killed in the melee, an administration building was torched and students
fled from exam rooms.
Police say they
entered eastern Cairo’s Al-Azhar campus, the site of frequent clashes in recent
weeks, and deployed around other Egyptian universities to prevent supporters of
ousted President Mohammed Morsi from intimidating other students trying to take
the tests. Pro-Morsi activists have called for an exam boycott but deny
government claims that they threatened anyone. Students at al-Azhar, a
stronghold of Morsi supporters, have been protesting for weeks against his
ouster and a subsequent state crackdown, which this week saw his Muslim
Brotherhood group declared a terrorist organization. The Brotherhood dismisses
the label and has vowed to keep up its protests against Egypt-military backed
authorities. Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Higher Education Hossam
Eissa said authorities will go after those he said were financing non-peaceful
protests on campuses, and accused the Brotherhood of seeking to derail exams. The
aim of the terrorist Brotherhood group is to call off university exams,” he
said according to comments published on the state news agency MENA. “The role
of the government is to restore security especially before the referendum on
the constitution. The government is intensifying its crackdown on Brotherhood
and Morsi supporters ahead of a Jan. 14-15 constitutional referendum they see
as a milestone in the transition plan. Authorities fear Morsi supporters would
seek to derail the key vote, through protests or by violent means. University
professors and security officials accused protesting students on Saturday of
blocking entrances to classes and harassing students as they made their way
into the campus. A statement from the Interior Ministry, in charge of the
police, said students stormed several buildings on campus to “terrorize
students and faculty.” It said some fired shotguns into the air and smashed
furniture. The ministry statement said that the attack prompted the police to
move in to disperse the crowd, leading the students to setting the Faculty of
Commerce on fire. Aya Fathy, a student spokeswoman, disputed the officials
claim, saying the students were protesting peacefully. She said police moved in
to break up protesters outside the faculty building, firing indiscriminately at
them, and killing student Khaled el-Haddad. She accused the police of setting
the building on fire to blame the students. She said the police force was
chasing students on campus. Footage from local TV stations and social media
websites showed the campus as a battleground. Flames rose from the three-story
building, with rooms inside badly torched. Pitched battles pitting police
against rock-throwing students, some armed with what appeared to be homemade
guns or projectile launchers, left the campus deserted, strewn with rocks and
debris. Other images showed masked protesters on roofs of university buildings
lobbing rocks at security, and students jumping out of windows to escape the
violence.
Other video showed
plainclothes security with sticks grabbing a woman by her veil, kicking her,
and manhandling her away.
Exams were postponed
at the Faculty of Commerce and other schools on campus. The university dean
said the delay will only be for hours. Osama el-Abd, the dean, told Egypt’s
state news agency that alternative classrooms will be provided for the students
to carry out the exams, and those scheduled Sunday. He said investigation will
be launched to determine the students behind Saturday’s violence.
The Interior Ministry
didn’t mention el-Haddad’s death in its statement. But a security official
confirmed he was killed and said 14 others were injured. He blamed the students
for the violence, and said 68 students, including seven female students, were
arrested. He said three policemen were injured. The official spoke on condition
of anonymity in line with regulations.
The violence in
Al-Azhar university set off protests on a university campus in the Nile Delta
city of Zagzig, where students lobbed rocks at police forces.
Following the
Brotherhood’s designation as terrorist, officials have warned that anyone
joining the group’s protests will face stiff prison sentences.
The designation has
coincided with the revival of old tactics used by the security forces, some of
which have the potential to spark new kinds of violence. Officials in Egypt’s
south sought help from tribes and large clans, who are traditionally heavily
armed, to ward off protests by pro-Morsi supporters.
The government
accused the Brotherhood of orchestrating a series of attacks by Sinai militants
against troops to destabilize the transition— but have provided little evidence
to prove the connection. It was the main justification for the authorities
labeling the group a terrorist one.
Human Rights Watch
said Saturday that the designation of the Muslim Brotherhood as a terrorist
group was “politically motivated” and would affect the health and education
services provided by the group to thousands of beneficiaries.
On Saturday, security
officials said they have diffused a homemade explosive device planted on a
public transportation bus in northeast Cairo. The officials said the driver
discovered the device under a passenger seat. The officials spoke on condition
of anonymity because they were not authorized to brief reporters.
The Brotherhood
denied it adopts violence. But amid the crackdown and with hundreds killed, the
group’s supporters have become increasingly defiant. In a statement late
Friday, the group accused security agencies and intelligence of “committing
terrorism” to frame their enemies.
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