Egypt Army to Intervene if Unrest Erupts

Egypt Army to Intervene if Unrest Erupts

Egypt’s defence minister has warned that the army will intervene if violence breaks out in the country where opponents of President Mohamed Morsi are planning rallies against him this month.

Morsi’s opponents, who accuse him of hijacking the 2011 uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak’s regime, plan a rally on June 30 to mark the day Morsi was sworn in as Egypt’s first civilian and Islamist president a year ago.

The defence minister urged Egyptians to set aside their differences, saying it was the army’s duty to act to prevent chaos.

He also criticised those who made anti-army statements.

On Friday, a member of Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood movement, Mohamed al-Baltagui, criticised the army at a rally organised by supporters of the president ahead of the opposition’s planned protest.

Morsi met General Sisi later Sunday, to go over the plans for the military “for the upcoming period,” the presidency said in a statement.

The president told his defence minister “to rapidly put in place all measures needed to assure the security of all vital and strategic structures in the country in coordination with the interior ministry,” the statement continued.

Tens of thousands of Morsi supporters massed on Friday in a show of strength ahead of the June 30 protest.

Morsi has repeated a call for dialogue in an attempt to ease deep political divisions.

There are fears ahead of the anti-Morsi rallies that violence could erupt between his supporters and opponents.

Egypt is deeply polarised. Morsi’s supporters say he is clearing institutions of decades of corruption, but his critics accuse him of concentrating power in the hands of the Muslim Brotherhood.

Since taking office a year ago, Morsi has squared off against the judiciary, media, police and most recently artists.

Leading opponent Mohamed ElBaradei, a former chief of UN nuclear watchdog the International Atomic Energy Agency, urged the president to resign for the sake of national unity.

A campaign dubbed Tamarod (rebellion in Arabic) first called the anti-Morsi rally to coincide with the first anniversary of his taking office.

Tamarod rapidly picked up steam, and organisers said they have collected 15 million signatures demanding that Morsi step down.

The president says political differences can still be resolved.

He has said he would consider bringing forward parliamentary elections scheduled for later this year, although no date has yet been set.

Egypt has been rocked by violence over the past year, with political divisions spilling onto the streets in sometimes deadly confrontations.

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