Three Egyptians were killed late on Friday deposed President Mohammed Mursi of the conflict between supporters and opponents of thousands rally demanding the reinstatement of Islamic leaders after the city in Egypt.
Two women and a 13-year-old boy were killed and eight people were injured, one of them critically, in the conflict, in the Nile Delta town of Mansoura outbreak, SAED Zhagelule Health Ministry official told Reuters reporters.
Because Mursi removal by the military in the July 3, there have been at least 99 people died in violence in which more than half when troops fired on July 8 against Islamic Cairo protesters outside the barracks. Seven people were killed earlier this week, the conflict between the opposing camps.
However, the Egyptian army, split the country's first freely elected president in office, looking in no mood to make concessions, the show of force, in Cairo, hazy sky.
Eight fighter screaming, while over the city in the morning and afternoon two formations of helicopters, some of the trailing Egyptian flag, singing the roof.
As early as Saturday, army helicopter saw thousands of Mursi's opponents gathered in downtown Cairo's Tahrir Square (Tahrir Square) on the Egyptian flag dropped.
Together portrait of bearded Mursi, waving his Egyptian flag in Cairo, Alexandria and several other cities along the Nile Delta procession members of the Muslim Brotherhood, condemned what they call a military coup.
"We came out today to restore legitimacy," said Tariq Yassin, aged 40, had traveled to the southern city of Cairo Sohag, emphasizing the brothers deeply rooted in the provinces. "We think what happened secular thuggery, it will never happen in any democratic country," he said.
Soldiers to stop protesters approaching army installation and a slight scuffle reports forces fired tear gas to disperse demonstrators near the presidential palace in Cairo, the state news agency said.
"Our protest progress and prepare for all events or upgrade" a military official said, asked not named because he was not authorized to speak to the media.
"They (Brothers) now know who is not around, have it after what happened with them, they and their country in the past year," the official said.
Rejected any military coup rumors, saying its vast protests, on June 30 against Mursi had to intervene only after one year in office, many of his critics as incompetent and partisan condemnation.
It calls for a new constitution and a new ticket quickly, install a temporary cabinet, including the lack of a string of election victory, after the fall of Hosni Mubarak, in 2011, brother or other Islamic political party members.
Fear chaos
Mursi was held in a secret location by the military, and many senior leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood, has also been detained in recent days, leading to fears of a broad crackdown.
Senior UN human rights official, Navi Pillay requires new Egyptian Government to explain the legal basis for detention and to say whether the pilot scheme.
"We have specifically asked (Mursi), he in addition to others who were arrested presidential team, we do not know how many people at this point," Pillay's spokesman Rupert Colville told reporters last Friday in Geneva.
Mursi's supporters have set up a round the clock Nasr City in Cairo suburb of a vigil outside the mosque. Thousands of people flocked to join the protest on Friday, but the intense summer heat and fast devout Muslims celebrate Ramadan, there may be some supporters.
"Tonight, Tonight, Tonight, Tonight Sisi go," the crowd chanted, referring to Abdel - Fatah people Sisi, head of the Armed Police Force, who drives Mursi play from the office a central role.
In his first address as interim president, Adriano Leaman Sur, before the Constitutional Court on Thursday promised to fight he said, want to shake state.
"We are going through a critical stage, some want us to confusion, we want to move toward stability and some want a bloody path," he said in a televised speech. "We will strive to secure the fight until the last."
Egypt, the Arab world's most populous country, is a strategic Middle East and North Africa between the hinges, has long been a key U.S. ally in the region.
Washington has been trying to tread lightly through the crisis, could not decide whether or not to brand Mursi coup downfall, which will force the U.S. to suspend all aid to Cairo, including about $ 130 million annually in military.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry phoned national new Egyptian Foreign Minister Nabil Fahmy, expressing hope that the government will succeed the transitional period, the Egyptian Foreign Ministry spokesman said on Friday.
Muslim Brotherhood leaders say they will not resort to violence, their activities, restoration Mursi.
"Peaceful rallies and sit-Egypt Peace Square, opposite the purpose of forcing the coup plotters to reverse their actions," Essam El-Erian, a senior Brotherhood officials said on his Facebook page.
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