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Fresh violence erupted early Wednesday
between protestors and police near Cairo's iconic Tahrir Square,
despite an offer by the ruling military council to speed up
the power transfer.
Police fired tear gas canisters to the rock-throwing crowds
of protestors in the Mohamed Mahmoud Street near the square
where the Interior Ministry building is located.
Some youth groups, including the April 6 movement and the
Revolution Youth Coalition, insisted on continuing the protests.
Ahmed Mohammady, 26, a member of the Revolution Youth Coalition,
said Wednesday in Tahrir Square that "We won't leave
until we end the military ruler who suppressed us and killed
innocent protestors, and we refuse the principle of referendum."
"We pulled the legitimacy from (military council head)
Tantawi. We won't leave until he announces a presidential
election date no later than next April and an immediate probe
into the clashes," said Ramy Swissy, spokesman of the
April 6 movement, one of the major youth groups that launched
the mass anti-government protests in late January to force
the departure of former President Hosni Mubarak.
The head of Egypt's ruling military council, Field Marshal
Hussein Tantawi, said Tuesday that the council had accepted
the resignation of the caretaker government led by Prime Minister
Essam Sharaf.
In a televised address to the nation, Tantawi announced that
the presidential elections will take place by July 2012 and
the military council will hand over power back to a civilian
government before July 1 that year.0
"The military does not expect to keep power," Tantawi
said, adding that the military "is ready to hand over
power immediately if people wish so" through a referendum.
Tantawi denied that the military is responsible for the deaths
resulting from the latest round of violence hitting Cairo
and other cities in recent days. The Egyptian army "never
killed a single Egyptian man or woman," he said.
"We can't believe him. Before he had told us that the
transitional period will take only 6 months, and almost 11
months passed now, and nothing new happened," said a
political professor in Cairo University, who asked to be identified
only as Mona.
Mona was one of the protestors who remained in the square
shouting slogans such as "We won't leave until Tantawi
leaves."
According to the Egyptian health ministry, the death toll
from the clashes across the country since Saturday has risen
to 32, 28 reported in Cairo, 2 in Alexandria, 1 in Matruh
and Ismailia each.
Despite the ongoing protests, the military said the Nov.
28 parliamentary elections would go ahead as planned. Major
political forces like the Muslim Brotherhood and the Al-Wafd
Party also demand the polls be held on time.
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