Thursday, December 6, 2012

In Cairo: Several Killed, Hundreds Injured, Tanks Deployed As Clashes Continue

A man who had been with members of the Muslim Brotherhood and supporters of Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi when he was injured during overnight clashes in Cairo is carried from the scene by others.

Gianluigi Guercia /AFP/Getty Images

A man who had been with members of the Muslim Brotherhood and supporters of Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi when he was injured during overnight clashes in Cairo is carried from the scene by others.

A man who had been with members of the Muslim Brotherhood and supporters of Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi when he was injured during overnight clashes in Cairo is carried from the scene by others.

Gianluigi Guercia /AFP/Getty Images

At least five people were killed overnight and more than 400 were wounded in clashes between supporters and opponents of Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi outside the presidential palace in Cairo, NPR's Soraya Sarhaddi Nelson reports.

The country's military has now moved tanks into the area. CNN says that's an effort to "bring some calm to the country's latest center of turmoil." Whether calm will come, of course, is uncertain. Soraya tells our Newscast Desk, "there are calls from Morsi's supporters and detractors for more demonstrations outside the palace in the coming hours."

As she adds:

"The violence overnight was the worst since Morsi issued decrees in late November putting himself above the law [and followed clashes earlier on Wednesday]. His recent call for a national referendum on a controversial new constitution drafted by his allies is escalating the tensions.

"Two more Morsi advisers resigned in protest of the growing violence. In a statement, about a fifth of the Egyptian diplomatic corps demanded the foreign ministry not help with the constitutional referendum that begins this weekend for ex-pat Egyptians."

Morsi is scheduled to address his nation later today. We'll watch for more news from Cairo. Meanwhile, here are some of the headlines from other news outlets:

â€" "Rivals Clash Despite Tanks At Egypt Presidential Palace." (Reuters)

â€" "In Egypt, Protests Turn Violent As Political Crisis Intensifies." (The Washington Post)

â€" "Mursi Branded Pharaoh As New Egypt Gives Way To Protests." (BloombergBusinessweek)

Note: NPR follows Associated Press style on the spelling of Morsi's name. Other news organizations do not.

 
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