Egyptian soldiers arrest a man after tearing down a protest camp in Tahrir Square in downtown Cairo on Monday. Troops clashed with a small group of the protesters, who want more political changes and the country's ex-president, Hosni Mubarak, to face justice. (Ben Curtis/Associated Press)
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Egyptian forces swinging electrified batons and shouting the battle cry "God is great" swiftly chased off dozens of activists Monday who had refused to end four weeks of renewed protests at Cairo's Tahrir Square.Hundreds of riot police backed by armoured vehicles and soldiers moved in to tear down a camp of dozens of tents after a group of activists — some of them relatives of people killed in the national uprising that toppled ex-president Hosni Mubarak in February — refused commands over loudspeakers to go home. Some in the crowd, whose demonstration aimed to pressure the country's military rulers, hurled stones at the police.
A boy salvages items from the rubble after Egyptian troops tore down the protest camp in Cairo's Tahrir Square on Monday. Ben Curtis/Associated Press Firing shots in the air and using clubs, Egyptian forces cleared the square within minutes.
With Mubarak's trial on charges that he ordered the killing of protesters due to start Wednesday, the ruling military council appeared to run out of patience with the protesters, whose key demand is to see the former president and other members of his regime face justice.
Still, some were surprised by the security sweep, especially as it came on the first day of Ramadan, the Muslim holy month of fasting that is traditionally a time of forgiveness and tolerance.
"Attacking the families of martyrs and the people protecting them in the square seems weird. I didn't think this could happen on the first day of Ramadan," activist Omar Kamel said.
The trial of the 83-year-old ousted president will be a key test for the tense relationship between the protest movement and the generals who took power when Mubarak was forced out on Feb. 11 after nearly 30 years in office. Many activists are skeptical that a military council headed by Mubarak's longtime defence minister can deliver on promises of democratic reforms before returning the country to civilian rule.
They also accuse it of dragging its feet with prosecutions of regime figures and say it has so far failed to weed out Mubarak loyalists from the judiciary, police and civil service.
Mubarak faces death penalty
It remains to be seen whether Mubarak, hospitalized for heart problems in the Red Sea resort where he has lived since his ouster, will be brought to Cairo for his trial's opening session. Activists suspect Mubarak's lawyer and others close to him are exaggerating the extent of his health problems to delay the proceedings.Mubarak, his security chief and six top police officers could face the death penalty if convicted of ordering the use of lethal force against the protesters. About 850 protesters were killed in the 18-day uprising.
Monday's clashes in Tahrir, which was the centre of the uprising, add to the tension.
Breaking up the encampment, which was set up on July 8, appeared inevitable. Most of the several hundred activists who had been camping there had already decided to end the sit-in at the start of Ramadan. A small group of activists, many of them relatives of slain protesters, refused to go before Mubarak sets foot in a courtroom.
Activist Lilian Wagdy, who was in Tahrir when the forces charged in, said the clashes began when some protesters tried to stop police from entering through makeshift checkpoints.
"They beat people with sticks and electrified batons. I don't see why they had to use excessive force like this," she said.
State radio reported later that 270 people were arrested, describing them as thugs and criminals.
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