Rival mass protests have been called for next Tuesday in Egypt
over a bitterly disputed constitutional referendum, raising the
potential for more violent street clashes in a sharpening political
crisis.
President Mohamed Morsi's chief foes, the
opposition National Salvation Front, late Sunday called for huge
protests in Cairo to reject the December 15 referendum on a new charter.
The Muslim Brotherhood, from which Morsi hails,
told AFP that it and allied Islamist movements would counter with their
own big rallies in the capital in support of the referendum.
If the duelling demonstrations go ahead, there is a
risk of vicious further clashes like the ones that erupted between both
sides outside the presidential palace last Wednesday, killing seven
people and wounding hundreds.
Egypt's powerful army, which is trying to remain
neutral in the deepening struggle, warned on the weekend it "will not
allow" a worsening of the crisis. It said both sides must start
dialogue.
Morsi has made a key concession to the opposition
on the weekend by rescinding a decree giving himself wide-ranging powers
free from judicial challenge.
But the opposition was unmoved, and maintained its position that no talks could happen while the referendum was going ahead.
"The Front calls for demonstrations in the capital
and in the regions on Tuesday as a rejection of the president's
decision that goes against our legitimate demands," National Salvation
Front spokesman Sameh Ashour told a news conference.
"We do not recognise the draft constitution because it does not represent the Egyptian people," he said, reading a statement.
Going ahead with the referendum "in this explosive
situation with the threat of the Brothers' militias amounts to the
regime abandoning its responsibilities," he said.
The Brotherhood's spokesman, Mahmud Ghozlan, told
AFP that the Alliance of Islamist Forces it belongs to was also "calling
for a demonstration Tuesday, under the slogan 'Yes to legitimacy'," and
in support of the referendum.
The almost nightly protests over the past two weeks have brought out thousands of people into the streets.
In recent days, the protesters have hardened their
slogans, going beyond criticism of the decree and the referendum to
demand Morsi's ouster.
Amid the protests and tensions, the army was
watching nervously. Tanks and troops have been deployed outside the
presidential palace but they have made no move to confront the
demonstrators.
On Sunday, air force F-16 warplanes flew low over
the city centre. The official MENA news agency described the unusually
low flyover as an exercise against "hostile air attacks and to secure
important state installations."
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