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Dozens Killed in Egypt Clashes, Mursi Defiant as Clock Ticks down on Army Ultimatum

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 Dozens Killed in Egypt Clashes, Mursi Defiant as Clock Ticks down on Army Ultimatum


03-07-2013 

 Egypt's President Mohamed Mursi told Egyptians on Tuesday that he had been freely elected little more than a year ago and that he intended to continue to carry out his duties despite mass protests demanding his resignation.


"The people chose me in free and fair elections," Mursi said in a televised address to the nation, adding that he would "continue to shoulder his responsibilities" as Egypt struggles with the legacy of decades of authoritarian rule.

The president said that respect for the constitutional order was the "only guarantee against further bloodshed," in a veiled attack against an ultimatum issued by the army for him to strike a deal with his opponents or have one imposed.

Mursi said he stood ready to "give my life" to defend constitutional legitimacy, echoing comments by a senior leader of the Muslim Brotherhood who urged supporters to be ready to sacrifice their lives to prevent a coup.

 The president renewed his appeal to the opposition to join a dialogue, an appeal it has already repeatedly rejected as a sham.

He once again accused supporters of the regime of ousted president Hosni Mubarak of trying to sow chaos and incite violence.


 Remnants of the old regime "want chaos... they don't want democracy," Mursi said.


 He warned that "violence and bloodshed is a trap. If we fall for it, it won't end."


 Legitimacy, he said, was the only guarantee against bloodshed.


 The campaign behind protests that saw millions of Egyptians calling for Mursi to step down accused him of "threatening his own people."


 "This is a president threatening his own people," said Mohammed Abdelaziz, a leader of the Tamarod campaign.

"We don't consider him the president of Egypt," Abdelaziz told an Egyptian television channel.
An earlier message posted on Mursi's official Twitter account said: "President Mursi insists on (his) constitutional legitimacy and rejects any attempt to overstep it."


 "(He) calls on the armed forces to withdraw their warning and rejects any dictates, domestic or foreign."


Mursi's statement came after millions took to the streets demanding his resignation, prompting the army to give him 48 hours to respond to the demands of the people or face an imposed solution.
The army gave all political forces until Wednesday to find a way out of the current crisis before it imposed its own roadmap.


On Tuesday, at least seven people died and dozens others were injured in clashes in Cairo between Mursi's supporters and opponents.

 In parallel, unidentified gunmen killed 16 people and wounded 200 others when they opened fire at a Cairo rally supporting embattled Mursi, health ministry officials said Wednesday.


"Sixteen people have been killed and 200 wounded in an attack on a demonstration supporting President Mursi next to Cairo University," state television reported, citing the ministry.

Source: News agencies, Edited by website team



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