10 Nov 2024
Sunday 18 August 2013 - 18:05
Story Code : 45465

Senior Iranian MP: US, Israel behind Egypts crisis

Senior Iranian MP: US, Israel behind Egypts crisis
TEHRAN (FNA)- A prominent Iranian legislator lashed out at the US and Israel for hatching plots against the Egyptian nation, and reiterated that Washington and Tel Aviv are behind the ongoing crisis in Egypt.


This scenario has been designed by the West, specially the US and Israel, to suppress the Egyptian revolution and make the Arab country return to its previous conditions, member of the parliaments National Security and Foreign Policy Commission Nozar Shafiee said.

The senior Iranian lawmaker said that the Egyptian armys recent bloody crackdown on pro-Mursi supporters supplemented its previous attempt which was ouster of Mursi from power.

Thousands of supporters of ousted president Mohammed Mursi protested across Egypt, sparking violence that killed at least 70 people and turned parts of Cairo into battlefields after police authorized the use of live ammunition.

The clashes came two days after over 600 people were killed in Egypt on Friday as police cleared two Cairo protest camps set up by loyalists of Mursi, in the country's bloodiest day in decades.

That crackdown drew strong condemnation from the international community, and EU foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton called Friday for the bloc to adopt "appropriate measures" in response.

But Egypt's cabinet issued a defiant statement, even as clashes continued in the hour before a night-time curfew began, saying it was confronting a "terrorist plot".

In Jordan, Morocco and the Palestinian territories, meanwhile, hundreds joined demonstrations in support of Mursi's Muslim Brotherhood movement.

The Islamist coalition led the Brotherhood had called for "Friday of anger" rallies across Egypt in response to the crackdown on their protest camps.

And violence erupted soon after protesters emerged from mosques following Friday prayers, with gunshots ringing out in Cairo and security forces firing tear gas.

In the capital, a man leapt off a bridge near a police station to escape shooting as police armored vehicles advanced on protesters, witnesses said.

An AFP correspondent counted at least 19 bodies in one Cairo mosque, while eyewitnesses said more than 20 corpses had been laid out in a second mosque.

Security sources and the health ministry reported at least 31 dead, including four in the Suez Canal city of Ismailiya and another eight in Northern Damietta.

In Cairo, streets were virtually deserted except for demonstrators and security forces, with the army deploying at key points in the city.

The interior ministry, which on Thursday authorized police to use live fire if government buildings came under attack, accused the Brotherhood of attacking police stations, saying it foiled several attempts to storm buildings.

Marches were also reported in the Mediterranean city of Alexandria, in Beni Sueif and Fayyum, South of Cairo, and in the Red Sea resort town of Hurghada.

Wednesday's bloody crackdown on the pro-Mursi protest camps has polarized Egypt, splintering the army-installed government and drawing forceful international condemnations.

The president of the UN Security Council pleaded for "maximum restraint" after an emergency meeting on Wednesday's violence.

By Fars News Agency

 

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