Last Updated, 2:02 p.m. As my colleague David Kirkpatrick reports from Egypt, there were protests in the Suez Canal city of Port Said and fresh clashes in Cairo on Monday.
Video uploaded to YouTube on Sunday showed officers firing at protesters in Port Said, killing four, including a man in a wheelchair, according to Mosireen, a collective of activist Egyptian filmmakers.
As clashes continued in Port Said on Monday, despite a declaration of martial law, journalists and bloggers there uploaded video of angry chants against the government at funerals for protesters and reports of escalating mayhem.
People carrying coffins chant -the ppl want the downfall of the regime #PortSaid #Egypt http://t.co/nnwYDhyl
— Rawya Rageh (@RawyaRageh) 28 Jan 13
Few minutes ago, the crowd at the funerals for those killed yesterday cheered as some burned an Egyptian flag #PortSaid
— Kristen Chick (@kristenchick) 28 Jan 13
People keep telling me they want international protection for #PortSaid
— Kristen Chick (@kristenchick) 28 Jan 13
Took some short videos from near al-Arab police station today. Not great, but here’s one with gunshots: http://t.co/ri6YoFLx
— Evan Hill (@evanchill) 28 Jan 13
Looking toward al Arab police station, APCs in thw distance. Almost constant gunfire. http://t.co/huwS09cN
— Evan Hill (@evanchill) 28 Jan 13
Tires burning, wind churning and guns firing from both protesters n police. #PortSaid looks like the Wild West. #Egypt
— T Todras-Whitehill (@taratw) 28 Jan 13
Emergency law or no, there is no law in port said right now.
— David D. Kirkpatrick (@kirkpatricknyt) 28 Jan 13
In Cairo, police fired tear gas on Sunday and Monday at protesters at the foot of the Kasr el-Nile bridge near Tahrir Square, which was the scene of an epic battle during the uprising against former President Hosni Mubarak exactly two years ago, on what was known as the revolution’s “Day of Rage.”
My favorite shot from the last few I just uploaded. Taken about an hour ago near #Tahrir as clashes continue.
#Egypt http://t.co/Q1td3r0q— Omar Kamel (@OmarKamel) 27 Jan 13
The activist blogger Omar Kamel shared dramatic photographs and video of the clashes by the bridge on Sunday, showing clouds of tear gas in front of the luxury hotels along the Nile Corniche illuminated by the protesters’ fireworks and lasers.
The Egyptian newspaper El Watan uploaded video of clashes in the same area on Monday.
The Cairene blogger who writes as Kikhote uploaded video shot from above Tahrir Square on Monday that zoomed in to the foot of the Kasr el-Nil bridge, showing the location of the bridge and what looked like hundreds of protesters gathered there.
Kikhote also drew attention to the activist blogger Rasha Azab’s photograph of a cloud of tear gas in the air above the heads of protesters near the foot of the bridge on Monday, in front of the distinctive salmon-colored facade of the Cairo Semiramis hotel.
via @RashaPress http://t.co/wkjBKbt6 #Clashes at #KasrElnil #Tahrir #Cairo #Egypt #Semiramis #Tourism
— Quick SoTic (@kikhote) 28 Jan 13
Tarek Shalaby, another activist blogger, reported on Twitter that a couple of hundred protesters remained on the bridge, with dozens of officers from the Central Security Forces on the Corniche nearby, at about 2 p.m. on Monday afternoon.
A couple of hundred here across the bridge. #Tahrir http://t.co/i8XxOvCW
— Tarek Shalaby (@tarekshalaby) 28 Jan 13
Prayer on Kasr El Nil bridge. #Jan28 http://t.co/JOC7e2Xd
— Tarek Shalaby (@tarekshalaby) 28 Jan 13
You can feel the tear gas still. Prayer was quick (for security reasons). #Tahrir #Jan28 #Jan25
— Tarek Shalaby (@tarekshalaby) 28 Jan 13
Started moving towards us, but accidentally dropped the tear gas bomb right next to them. This buys us time. #Tahrir http://t.co/WkVsiFWv
— Tarek Shalaby (@tarekshalaby) 28 Jan 13
Situation at Kasr El Nil bridge is calm, but can turn around easily. The police chose to restart the battle, not the protestors. #Tahrir
— Tarek Shalaby (@tarekshalaby) 28 Jan 13
A short time later, my colleague Kareem Fahim reported from the bridge that tear gas was being fired at protesters on the Cornche.
Spectators watch from Qasr el Nil bridge. Day full of tear gas, no sign of protest growing yet #egypt http://t.co/ntYaSij3
— Kareem Fahim (@kfahim) 28 Jan 13
At abut 5 p.m. local time, Jonathan Rashad, a photographer, reported on Twitter that the officers had pushed protesters back from the Cornche on to the bridge and into Tahrir Square.
Police fire tear gas canisters on head/waist level. Just saw an injured protester.
— Jonathan Rashad (@JonathanRashad) 28 Jan 13
CSF approaching Simon Bolivar. Many protesters retreated to Tahrir and Kasr El-Nil bridge.
— Jonathan Rashad (@JonathanRashad) 28 Jan 13
About two hours later, the Egyptian journalists Mohamed Abdelfattah and Simon Hanna reported from the Corniche that a protest march coming from the other direction had broken through the police lines just down the street from the Semiramis, and, after some fighting, the protesters captured a senior officer outside another luxury hotel, the Kempinski.
we’ve met a line of csf&apcs. they’re retreating slowly tho. they let us pass. #egypt #tahrir #jan28
— Simon Hanna (@simonjhanna) 28 Jan 13
We’ve swamped the police from both sides
— Mohamed Abdelfattah (@mfatta7) 28 Jan 13
Vehicle attempted to run over protesters. No one hurt.
— Mohamed Abdelfattah (@mfatta7) 28 Jan 13
Protesters caught a high ranking officer. Infighting whether to beat him down or ” to have mercy on an old man”
— Mohamed Abdelfattah (@mfatta7) 28 Jan 13
the protesters have captured a zabet. he’s in a crowd, some trying to hit&others to protect him. #egypt #tahrir #jan28
— Simon Hanna (@simonjhanna) 28 Jan 13
Selmeya selmeya protesters trying to escort him into kempinski hotel
— Mohamed Abdelfattah (@mfatta7) 28 Jan 13
Witnesses also said that the protesters then took control of one police armored personnel carrier, driving it to Tahrir Square, and set fire to another.
People just commandeered a police assault vehicle
— sherief gaber (@cairocitylimits) 28 Jan 13
Like, that apc belonged to the police and now it does not.
— sherief gaber (@cairocitylimits) 28 Jan 13
@SeifBatanouni: The protestors just stole a #CSF. ARMORED vehicle. Infront of. Kemmpinski hotel. #tahrir @OmarKamel http://t.co/wg7R1Ncl
— Seif El Batanouni (@SeifBatanouni) 28 Jan 13
Protesters in Kasr Ainy detain a high rank police officer and 2 police vans! The vans are the new ones that the MOI bought.
— The Big Pharaoh (@TheBigPharaoh) 28 Jan 13
Protestors steal 2 armored carriers, push police backwards http://t.co/2ZZxXrX4
— Adel Abdel Ghafar (@dooolism) 28 Jan 13
@cairocitylimits it’s public property. So technically all police equipment is public domain.
— Mostafa Hussein (@moftasa) 28 Jan 13
Taking back 11% of our national budget from the Ministry Of Interior, one vehicle at a time. #Egypt
— sherief gaber (@cairocitylimits) 28 Jan 13
Oh in my elation I failed to mention that another police apc has been set ablaze.
— sherief gaber (@cairocitylimits) 28 Jan 13
ذكر..فان الذكري تنفع المؤمنين http://t.co/CsgFtuTF
— رشا عزب (@RashaPress) 28 Jan 13
Protesters take control of a CSF truck from police and set it on fire #Egypt http://t.co/30iDMr02
— Sharif Kouddous (@sharifkouddous) 28 Jan 13
for the record, once again, this was a peaceful protest and was attacked without warning by central security forces.
— Dirk Wanrooij (@dirkwanrooij) 28 Jan 13
Corniche filled with protesters, riot police firing tear gas from side streets. Sporadic panic stampedes.
— Kareem Fahim (@kfahim) 28 Jan 13
At about 8 p.m. local time the A.P.C. that was driven into Tahrir Square by protesters was also on fire, as video posted online by the blogger Kikhote showed.
Morsi declared the state of emergency, so the revolution thought it’s a good night for a Tahrir square style bonfire http://t.co/b1dmvmZy
— Lobna Darwish (@lobna) 28 Jan 13
The Lede Blog: Images of New Clashes in Egypt, Two Years After the Revolution's 'Day of Rage'
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The Lede Blog: Images of New Clashes in Egypt, Two Years After the Revolution's 'Day of Rage'
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The Lede Blog: Images of New Clashes in Egypt, Two Years After the Revolution's 'Day of Rage'