Egypt crisis: 'Scores killed' at Cairo protest
More than 100 people have
been killed at a protest by supporters of ousted Egyptian President
Mohammed Morsi in the capital, Cairo, doctors say.
They said more than 1,000 were also hurt. The state health ministry says 38 people had died - 180 injured. The army ousted Mr Morsi on 3 July. He has been formally accused of murder relating to a 2011 jail outbreak and of links to militant group Hamas.
'Legal manner'
Many thousands occupied Cairo's Tahrir Square in support of the army, after its chief, Gen Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, had urged people to demonstrate to provide a mandate for its intervention.
Meanwhile, tens of thousands of Morsi supporters continued their sit-in protest at the mosque in the Nasr City area.
Early on Saturday, Interior Minister Mohammed Ibrahim vowed
to end the sit-in, saying local residents had complained about the
encampment.He said the protest would be "brought to an end soon and in a legal manner" with an order from the prosecutor, although this has yet to happen.
The BBC's Jim Muir in Cairo says the latest violence is the most serious since the army's intervention to remove President Morsi, but this does not appear to have been a planned campaign to clear the area around the mosque.
It appears the violence began after some of the Morsi supporters tried to block a main road in the area overnight and security forces responded.
The health ministry issued a lower death toll of 38, with 180 people wounded.
State news agency Mena quoted a security official as saying that live fire had not been used, only tear gas.
The official said security forces had been trying to stop fighting between rival sides and that eight security personnel had been injured.
But Muslim Brotherhood spokesman Gehad el-Haddad told Reuters news agency: "They are not shooting to wound, they are shooting to kill."
Our correspondent says medics at the hospital believed about 70% of the casualties were caused by live fire - with many of the victims hit in the chest or head by snipers firing from rooftops.
A senior Brotherhood politician, Saad el-Hosseini, told the agency that this was an attempt by security forces to clear the mosque area.
"I have been trying to make the youth withdraw for five hours. I can't. They are saying they have paid with their blood and they do not want to retreat," he said.
Our correspondent says Morsi supporters are furious about the role the military is taking, and in particular Gen Sisi, who they say is killing Egyptians.
At the scene
There were pools of blood all over the field hospital. Many of the injured were in bad shape. Some had parts of their head missing - taken out by bullets.The battle raged last night and all morning. We heard automatic gunfire. Protesters formed a human shield around us as shotguns and CS gas were fired towards us. There was the sound of outgoing shots too. The air was thick with tear gas and people were vomiting.
There was a child, maybe 12, covered in blood. He was deathly white. They closed the doors at the hospital as they could not accept more wounded, but the ambulances were still arriving.
As we left, a child was dragged from a car by the Morsi supporters outside the mosque. He was given a very serious beating.
Egypt's pro-Muslim Brotherhood TV station,
Ahrar 25, quoted the coalition that supports Mr Morsi - the National
Coalition for Supporting Legitimacy - as saying it held Gen Sisi
responsible for the deaths at the mosque protest.
There has also been violence in Egypt's second city of
Alexandria, where at least 10 people have been killed in clashes between
rival factions.European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said she "deeply deplored" the latest deaths in Egypt.
A spokeswoman said Baroness Ashton called "on all actors to refrain from violence and to respect the principles of peaceful protest".
UK Foreign Secretary William Hague said: "Now is the time for dialogue, not confrontation. It is the responsibility of leaders on all sides to take steps to reduce tensions."
Morsi accused
Mr Morsi, the country's first democratically elected president, has now been formally accused of the "premeditated murder of some prisoners, officers and soldiers" when he and several Muslim Brotherhood leaders were freed during a breakout at a Cairo prison in January 2011.
He is alleged to have plotted attacks on jails in the uprising that overthrew President Hosni Mubarak.
Mr Morsi is also accused of conspiring with the Palestinian militant group Hamas, which governs the Gaza Strip and has strong links with the Muslim Brotherhood.
Mr Morsi has been formally remanded in custody at an undisclosed location for an initial 15-day period, a judicial order said.
The order issued on Friday was the first official statement on Mr Morsi's legal status since he was overthrown.
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