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Africa North
Police strikes in Egypt accelerate
2013-03-09
Strikes by Egyptian security forces spread swiftly around the country on Friday, as police walked off the job or took to the streets. The security forces are angry at being blamed for crackdowns on protests against the Islamist president and accusing his Muslim Brotherhood of trying to control them.

The wave of police discontent adds a new layer to Egypt's turmoil and political breakdown. In a sign of the disarray, a powerful hard-line Islamist group said its members would now take over policing a southern province because most security forces in the province were on strike.

Strikes by policemen and riot police were reported in at least 10 of Egypt's 29 provinces, including at several stations in the capital, Cairo.

The police discontent comes after relentless protests and unrest around the country since late January -- which in turn followed an earlier wave of protests in November and December. In past weeks, protesters have taken to the streets largely in anger against Islamist President Mohammed Mursi and his Muslim Brotherhood, which the opposition accuses of trying to dominate power in the country. But other factors have fueled unrest, including a declining economy and fuel shortages.

Near daily, the demonstrations have turned into clashes with police in multiple cities, resulting in the killing of around 70 protesters. Each death has increased public anger against the security forces, fueled further by reports of torture of some activists by security agents. The force is already widely hated because of its legacy of abuses and brutality under ousted President Hosni Mubarak.

Now that has sparked a backlash by many of the lower-ranking members of the security forces. Protesting police accuse Morsi of using them to crack down on his opponents and demand the resignation of the current, Morsi-appointed interior minister, who they accuse of engineering efforts to bring Islamist sympathizers into the ministry.

Police officers in the southern city of Sohag marched in front of one station, holding signs reading, "No to the Brotherhoodization of the ministry."

Police in charge of protecting the headquarters of the Muslim Brotherhood, which makes up the backbone of Mursi's rule, have gone on strike, as have others tasked with escorting Mursi's motorcades.

Some members of the Central Security forces -- the riot police force that is at the forefront of cracking down on protesters -- have come to near munity.

On Thursday, protesting riot police trapped the Central Security's top commander for several hours inside their camp at the city of Port Said, refusing to deploy in the city against protesters. On Friday, the Interior Ministry announced that the commander, Gen. Maged Nouh, had been removed from his post and replaced by his deputy, Ashraf Abdullah.

Port Said, located at the Mediterranean end of the Suez Canal, has been the center of the heaviest violence during the unrest. Many fear a new wave of violence on Saturday when a court issues new verdicts and sentences in a contentious trial over a deadly soccer riot in Port Said in February 2012. A first set of verdicts on Jan. 28 -- in which 21 Port Said residents were sentenced to death over the riot -- sparked the city's initial uprising because its population sees the trial as unjust and politicized.

On Saturday, the court is scheduled to issue verdicts on around 50 more defendants, mostly Port Said residents but also including nine police officers. If the police personnel are convicted or handed heavy sentences, it will likely further fuel resentment among the security forces.
Posted by:Steve White

#4  On Saturday, the court is scheduled to issue verdicts on around 50 more defendants, mostly Port Said residents but also including nine police officers

Guilty verdicts all around, per later reports.
Posted by: Pappy   2013-03-09 14:36  

#3  These are the "democratic reforms" Kerry talks about?


His thinking runs thusly: some of the people wanted these guys running things, so the outcome by definition is democratic. And since, by definition everything done democratically is both right and good, how can he fail to approve?
Posted by: trailing wife   2013-03-09 14:16  

#2  Kerry is an opportunistic shill.
Posted by: Threater Flusoper9823   2013-03-09 06:36  

#1  These are the "democratic reforms" Kerry talks about?
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2013-03-09 05:04  

00:00