Egypt detains US citizen, 38 others over torching tram

Egypt has detained 39 people, including a US citizen, accused of torching a tram during a protest against the overthrow of Islamist president Mohamed Mursi, judicial sources said on Saturday.

The accused, who were placed in 15-day preventive detention, were members of Mursi’s Muslim Brotherhood movement, the sources said, adding that they were also accused of rioting and attacking policemen on Friday during protests in Cairo.

On Friday the interior ministry said students linked to the Muslim Brotherhood had torched a tram carriage in Cairo’s eastern district of Heliopolis.

Sources said on Saturday that one of the detainees had a US passport, but it was unclear if he held other citizenship.

Islamist backers of Mursi have regularly staged protests against the country’s new military-installed authorities since his July 3 ouster.

On Friday, a young boy and a man were killed as supporters and opponents of Mursi clashed in several parts of Egypt, including in Cairo, officials said.

The confrontations came as pro-Mursi groups called for a week of anti-military protests under the slogan ‘Massacre of the Century’, a reference to the violent dispersal of two pro-Mursi protest camps on August 14 in which hundreds of people, mainly Mursi supporters, were killed.

Authorities have launched a sweeping crackdown on Islamists in recent months, arresting some 2,000 people, including most of the top leadership of the Muslim Brotherhood, the country’s oldest and most well-organised Islamist movement.

AFP

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