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Protesters chant slogans and wave national flags Tuesday in Tahrir Square in Cairo. Hundreds of black-clad riot police deployed around the Itihadiya palace in Cairo’s district of Heliopolis.

Protesters chant slogans and wave national flags Tuesday in Tahrir Square in Cairo. Hundreds of black-clad riot police deployed around the Itihadiya palace in Cairo’s district of Heliopolis.
Maya Alleruzzo / The Associated Press

Egyptians take protests against Morsi to his palace

By Abigail Hauslohner / The Washington Post
Published: December 05. 2012 4:00AM PST

CAIRO — Tens of thousands of protesters massed outside the presidential palace and in Tahrir Square in Cairo on Tuesday, as Egyptians voiced their opposition to President Mohammed Morsi for a 12th straight day.

The deepening political crisis has pitted Morsi, the country’s first democratically elected president, and his Islamist backers against a broad alliance of young liberals, judges, human rights groups and loyalists of the former government.

Morsi ignited a wave of protest Nov. 22 when he granted himself far-reaching powers to legislate without judicial oversight, a move that his opponents say amounted to a dictatorial power grab.

Protests rarely approach the presidential palace, and opposition members billed Tuesday’s demonstration as an “important step" in escalating pressure on the president to rescind his decree.

Thousands pressed against the palace gates amid thunderous chants of “We won’t leave! He should leave!" Some climbed atop the military vehicles that ringed the complex and spray-painted anti-Islamist slogans on the walls.

Protesters clashed sporadically with security forces using tear gas outside the palace and near Tahrir Square on Tuesday night. Witnesses said some of the riot police appeared to join the crowd, underscoring what they said was opposition to Morsi within his security services.

Morsi did not comment on the unrest but left the presidential compound during the protest, the Reuters news agency reported. The Muslim Brotherhood’s Freedom and Justice Party, which often serves as Morsi’s mouthpiece, said on the group’s website that perpetrators of violence or vandalism in the day’s protest would be held accountable.

The Islamists and their opponents have described Egypt’s deepening crisis, which centers on a draft of the new constitution, as a battle for the country’s soul and the success of its faltering transition to democracy.

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