New 150 killed: Egyptian protesters defy curfew on ‘Friday of anger’ “Choking Videos and Pics”

Cairo (CNN) — Thousands of protesters defied a government-imposed curfew Friday evening, staying put at Cairo’s Ramses Square and in the streets.
Nightfall threatened to increase tensions even more in Egypt as the military said it would “deal firmly” with anyone who breaches the curfew.
The protesters, mostly supporters of deposed President Mohamed Morsy, filed into the streets after afternoon prayers, promising a “Friday of anger.”
The fear is that the skirmishes foreshadow a violent wave similar to one that broke out Wednesday when hundreds were killed.
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Already Friday, 17 people had been killed and more than 40 wounded in clashes between Morsy supporters and security forces, state-run Nile TV reported.
A CNN crew witnessed men in plainclothes standing next to military tanks and firing into crowds. The crew also saw that some in the crowd were armed.
Earlier, security forces fired tear gas at a mass of people on a major bridge leading to the centrally located Ramses Square. Machine gun fire was heard in central Cairo as a military chopper flew overhead.
Since Wednesday, 52 police officers have been killed, state television reported. Earlier reports of 64 dead were incorrect. State TV also said 25 police stations and 10 churches have been attacked. The interim government has blamed the Muslim Brotherhood for the attacks.
“The struggle to overthrow this illegitimate regime is an obligation,” the Muslim Brotherhood said on its website Friday, while urging people to protest peacefully.
Military vehicles were deployed Friday across Cairo and Giza, taking up positions in squares and securing important institutions, the state-run EGYNews reported.
The news agency said the military increased checkpoints at all entrances to Cairo to prevent the smuggling of arms to protesters.
Police will use live ammunition to subdue any attack against police facilities, state media said.
Meanwhile, French President Francois Hollande and German Chancellor Angela Merkel called for a meeting next week of European Union foreign ministers to coordinate a response to the violence in Egypt.
Egyptian authorities rejected criticism from U.S. President Barack Obama and other world leaders on Wednesday’s ferocious clashes, which left at least 580 people dead after security forces broke up huge sit-ins in Cairo, according to the Health Ministry.
The protesters support Morsy, a former Muslim Brotherhood leader elected president in 2012 whom the military removed July 3. Morsy and some other Brotherhood leaders are under arrest.
The “Friday of anger” began with marches from mosques around Cairo, with the aim of converging in Ramses Square.






































