The  ongoing clashes lasted late into the night, bringing out a deployment  of more than 1,000 security forces and armored vehicles to defend the state television  building along the Nile, where the trouble began. The clashes spread to  nearby Tahrir Square and the area around it, drawing in thousands of  people. They battled each other with rocks and firebombs, some tearing  up pavement for ammunition and others collecting stones in boxes.
At  one point, a group of youths with at least one riot policeman among  them dragged a protester by his legs for a long distance. Witnesses said  some of the protesters may have snatched weapons from the soldiers and  turned them on the military. The protesters also pelted the soldiers  with rocks and bottles.
Christians  blame Egypt's ruling military council for being too lenient on those  behind a spate of anti-Christian attacks since the ouster of Mubarak.  The Coptic Christian minority makes up about 10 percent of the country  of more than 80 million people. As Egypt undergoes a chaotic power  transition and security vacuum in the wake of this year's uprising,  Christians are particularly worried about the increasing show of force  by the ultraconservative Islamists.
The  Christian protesters said their demonstration began as a peaceful  attempt to sit in at the television building. But then, they said they  came under attack by thugs in plainclothes who rained stones down on  them and fired pellets.
"The  protest was peaceful. We wanted to hold a sit-in, as usual," said Essam  Khalili, a protester wearing a white shirt with a cross drawn on it.  "Thugs attacked us and a military vehicle jumped over a sidewalk and ran  over at least 10 people. I saw them."
Wael Roufail, another protester, corroborated the account."I saw the vehicle running over the protesters. Then they opened fired at us," he said.
Khalili said protesters set fire to army vehicles when they saw them hitting the protesters.
Television  footage of the riots showed some of the Coptic protesters attacking a  soldier, while a priest tried to protect him. One soldier collapsed in  tears as ambulances rushed to the scene to take away the injured.
The  protest began in the Shubra district of northern Cairo, then headed to  the state television building along the Nile where men in plainclothes  attacked about a thousand Christian protesters as they chanted  denunciations of the military rulers.
"The  people want to topple the field marshall," the protesters yelled,  referring to the head of the ruling military council, Field Marshall  Hussein Tantawi. Some Muslim protesters later joined in the same chant.
Armed  with sticks, the Muslim assailants chased the Christian protesters from  the TV building, banging metal street signs to scare them off. It was  not immediately clear who the attackers were.Gunshots  rang out at the scene, where lines of riot police with shields tried to  hold back hundreds of Christian protesters chanting "This is our  country."
Security forces  eventually fired tear gas to disperse the protesters. The clashes then  moved to nearby Tahrir Square, the epicenter of the uprising against  Mubarak. The army closed off streets around the area.
The clashes left streets littered with shattered glass, stones, ashes and soot from...More.

 
 
 
 
 
 10/09/2011 01:59:00 PM
10/09/2011 01:59:00 PM
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