Egypt: Noisy, peaceful protest outside Morsi's palace

Egypt: Noisy, peaceful protest outside Morsi's palace
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Summary Thousands of protesters stage a noisy but peaceful demonstration outside Morsi's palace in Cairo.

 

Several thousand protesters broke through a barbed-wire perimeter protecting the Cairo palace of President Mohamed Morsi on Friday to stage a noisy but peaceful demonstration against his expanded powers and proposed changes to the constitution.

 

As the crowd shot off fireworks, blew horns and painted slogans on the palace walls for Morsi to "Leave," his vice-president hinted at a possible compromise on a referendum for the draft charter aimed at calming the seething national crisis.

 

A cordon of soldiers prevented the protesters from nearing the palace s main gate, but there was no visible violence -- unlike on Wednesday, when bloody clashes broke out at the same spot between pro- and anti-Morsi supporters that left seven people dead and more than 600 injured.

 

Several army tanks were stationed in the square and nearby but made no movement against the protesters, some of whom clambered aboard to declare the army was "hand in hand" with them.

 

That was reminiscent of the popular uprising that ousted long-time president Hosni Mubarak early last year, when tanks stood idle amid massive protests in Cairo s Tahrir Square, as protesters mixed with soldiers.

 

The crowd also shouted "We want to see the fall of the regime" -- a slogan common during the anti-Mubarak revolt.

 

The interior ministry issued a statement late Friday urging the protesters to go home and saying extra security had been deployed around the palace to ensure calm.

 

A few kilometres (miles) away, around 2,000 Morsi supporters demonstrated outside a mosque, an AFP correspondent said. "We re with the president" and "We love you Morsi," they chanted.

 

Ayman al-Sawwah, a member of Morsi s Muslim Brotherhood, said he and his fellow demonstrators "won t go to the palace unless they (opposition) try to enter it by force."

 

The opposition has been demonstrating for two weeks against bolstered powers Morsi decreed for himself putting him above the law, and against a December 15 referendum on a draft constitution it sees as having been railroaded through by a panel of Morsi s Islamist allies.

 

On Friday, however, Egypt s vice-president, Mahmud Mekki, told AFP that Morsi "could accept to delay the referendum" on the draft constitution, but only if the opposition guaranteed it would launch no legal challenge to the decision.
 

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