Wednesday, May 02, 2012
(Adds details, background.)
CAIRO (AFP)--An anti-military protest near the defense ministry in Cairo was attacked by thugs Wednesday and 20 people were killed, officials said, in the politically tense run-up to the first post-uprising presidential election.
The dawn assault sparked fierce clashes between the unidentified attackers and the protesters, who have been there for days calling for an end to military rule, with both sides hurling Molotov cocktails and stones, the official said.
A security official said the army and security forces had formed a cordon between the protesters and the attackers, bringing the fighting to a halt.
A doctor at a field hospital set up in the area said 20 people had been killed and dozens injured.
Four presidential candidates announced they had temporarily suspended their campaigns over the killings.
The Muslim Brotherhood's Mohammed Mursi told reporters he decided to suspend his campaign for 48 hours "in solidarity with the protesters."
He blamed the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces because it is the ruling authority. SCAF "is the first to be responsible," he said.
His main Islamist rival, Abdel Moneim Abul Fotouh, cancelled all his events for the day over the clashes, a campaign official told AFP.
Leftist candidates Khaled Ali and Hamdeen Sabbahi also said they were suspending their campaigns.
Pro-democracy activists including the Coalition of Revolution Youth, as well as Abul Fotouh, have called for a march to Abbassiya at 5.00p.m. local time (1500 GMT) to demand an end to the bloodshed in Cairo, where traffic in the center of the city had ground to a halt and created patches of gridlock across the capital.
Leading dissident Mohamed ElBaradei denounced the "massacre" outside the ministry of defense.
"SCAF & Government unable to protect civilians or in cahoots with thugs. Egypt going down the drain," the former U.N. nuclear watchdog chief posted on Twitter.
The protesters, supporters of Salafist politician Hazem Abu Ismail, have been camped out since Saturday after the electoral commission barred the popular Islamist from contesting the coming presidential election.
The electoral commission on April 14 barred 10 candidates, including the Muslim Brotherhood's Khairat El-Shater and the former president's intelligence chief Omar Suleiman, from standing in the poll to choose Mubarak's successor.
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
02-05-12 1434GMT




















