guardian.co.uk,
Peter Beaumont and agencies, Tuesday 22 November 2011
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| Protesters place a puppet depicting Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi on an Egyptian national flag in Tahrir Square. Photograph: Mohamed Abd El Ghany/Reuters |
Egypt's
ruling military struggled to quell growing protests over its slow progress in
transferring power to a civilian government, as tens of thousands of protesters
in Cairo's Tahrir Square rejected its offer of concessions.
The
country's military rulers on Tuesday afternoon suggested a deadline of July
next year for a transfer of power – after a crisis meeting lasting five hours.
Field
Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, head of the ruling Supreme Council of the
Armed Forces, later told the nation in a televised address that presidential
elections would be held before 30 June, but did not specifically mention a date
for the transfer of power.
In his
brief address, he sought to cast the military as the nation's foremost patriots
and angrily denounced what he called attempts to taint its reputation.
But in
scenes reminiscent of the street violence that pushed former president Hosni
Mubarak from power, protesters in Cairo's Tahrir Square vowed not to leave
until Tantawi and his council of generals immediately gave up power to a
civilian transitional authority.
The
protesters chanted: "We are not leaving, [Tantawi] leaves," and,
"The people want to bring down the field marshal."
The
forthright refusal of the generals' offer stirred memories of the response to
Mubarak's attempts, played out over three national speeches, to hang on to
power earlier this year.
It sets the
stage for a growing conflict between the generals and activists angry at the
military's reluctance to withdraw from Egyptian politics.
As pungent
clouds of teargas set off stampedes, activists in and around Tahrir Square
chanted: "Stay, stay, stay."
The latest
street fighting in Cairo, which has begun spreading to other major cities
including Alexandria, comes just a week before scheduled parliamentary
elections.
The latest
moves came as the US, which gives Egypt's military $1.3bn (£830m) a year in aid
called for an end to the "deplorable" violence and said Egypt must go
forward towards its elections.
"We
are deeply concerned about the violence. The violence is deplorable. We call on
all sides to exercise restraint," White House spokesman Jay Carney told
reporters.
Earlier on
Tuesday the army council headed by Tantawi, who served as Mubarak's defence
minister for two decades, held talks with politicians on the crisis, in which
at least 36 people have been killed and more than 1,250 wounded since Saturday,
according to medical officials.
Aboul-Ela
Madi and Mohammed Selim el-Awa, two politicians who attended the five-hour
meeting with the military rulers, said the generals had accepted the offered
resignation of prime minister Essam Sharaf's government and said they planned
to form a "national salvation" cabinet to replace it.
Previously,
the military rulers had floated late next year or early 2013 as the time for
transferring power.
"Our
demands are clear. We want the military council to step down and hand over
authority to a national salvation government with full authority," said
Khaled El-Sayed, a member of the Youth Revolution Coalition and a candidate in
the parliamentary election. He said the commander of the military police and
the interior minister, who is in charge of the police, must be tried for the
"horrific crimes" of the past few days.
"This
is the maximum we can reach. The [Tahrir] square is something and the politics
is something else," Madi told Associated Press in a telephone interview.
He and Awa were among 12 political party representatives and presidential
hopefuls who attended the meeting with the military council. Not all parties
were represented.
Madi and
Awa also said the military agreed to release all protesters detained since
Saturday and to put on trial police and army officers responsible for
protesters' deaths.
They said
the military agreed to hold presidential elections before the end of June 2012,
a vote the ruling council has deemed the final stage necessary for transferring
power.
The
powerful Muslim Brotherhood, which anticipates a strong showing in the
election, was among the five parties at the crisis talks with the military
council. Three presidential candidates were also there, but a fourth, Mohamed
ElBaradei, stayed away.
"Elections
must be held on time and we will push for a specific timetable for the transitional
period," Saad el-Katatni, secretary general of the Brotherhood's
newly-formed Freedom and Justice party, told Reuters.
Presidential
candidate Amr Moussa echoed the call for the election to go ahead, but said a
presidential vote should take place no more than six months after the lengthy
process of polling for both houses of parliament is completed in March.
Under the
army's plans, parliament would name a constituent assembly to draw up a
constitution within six months that would then go to a referendum. Only after
that would a new president be elected to take back the powers of the military
council.
In the port
city of Alexandria, about 5,000 people marched to join 2,000 already
demonstrating against army rule outside a military command headquarters,
witnesses said.
The unrest
has knocked Egypt's markets. The benchmark share index has fallen 11% since
Thursday, hitting its lowest level since March 2009. The Egyptian pound fell to
its weakest against the dollar since January 2005.
In a
stinging verdict on nine months of army control, rights group Amnesty
International accused the military council of brutality sometimes exceeding
that of Mubarak.
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