A Brotherhood spokesman, Ahmed Aref, said 66 people had been
killed and another 61 were "brain dead" on life-support machines.
Egypt's department of health said the official figure was 65 dead. More
than 4,000 were treated for the effects of tear gas and gunshot or
birdshot wounds, Mr Aref said. "Innocent blood was spilled," he said.
"We have gone back 10 years."
Doctors working in nearby
hospitals where the dead and wounded were taken described the shootings
as a "catastrophe". Ahmed Fawzy, a cardiologist who was working at the
field hospital in eastern Cairo, described it as a "crime against
humanity."
By early morning there were 28 corpses lined
up around the walls of the makeshift morgue. Some had been shot by
single bullets to the head, said doctors; others perished after live
rounds passed through their necks or chest. More bodies were hauled in
later, as supporters of Mr Morsi continued to clash with Egypt's central
security services in the streets outside.
Doctors at the
scene said they believed more than 100 people may have been killed. If
initial estimates prove to be accurate, the massacre ranks as one of the
worst single incidents of violence since the fall of Hosni Mubarak.
Reports on al-Jazeera said that as many as 120 people may have been
killed – a tally that chimes with testimony given to The Independent on Sunday from doctors at the scene.
Egypt's
Interior Minister, Mohamed Ibrahim, later accused the Brotherhood of
exaggerating the death toll for political ends and denied that police
had opened fire. He said local residents living close to the Rabaa
al-Adawiya mosque vigil had clashed with protesters in the early hours
after they had blocked off a major bridge road, and that police had used
tear gas to try to break up the fighting.
It was only
three weeks ago that more than 50 supporters of Mr Morsi were shot dead
by the military close to where the killings unfolded. Mr Ibrahim now
appears to threaten a renewed assault on protesters, saying that, "God
willing, soon" they will be "dealt with".
Clashes were
continuing as police squared up against thousands of protesters close to
the sit-in in Rabaa al-Adawiya, a suburb of eastern Cairo. Members of
the central security forces fired sustained bursts of gunfire at
protesters massing in the open road.
Supporters of Mr
Morsi – who are demanding the Egyptian former leader be reinstated
following a coup just over three weeks ago – cowered behind makeshift
brick barricades as bullets fizzed overhead. Others ducked behind cars
or ran for cover as live rounds ricocheted off walls.
In
the field clinic, patients who had been shot with live rounds lay on the
grubby, blood-stained floor as medics tried to treat their wounds.
Eventually staff had to close the clinic when medical supplies dried up.
"I
blame General al-Sisi," said one doctor, referring to Egypt's army
chief and the man behind this month's popular coup. "They were killing
us on his orders."
It is still unclear exactly how the
fighting erupted. According to Gehad el-Haddad, a spokesman for the
Brotherhood's political wing, it began on the fringes of the sit-in
before dawn. Reports suggested that Mr Morsi's supporters had attempted
to move beyond the rally's confines towards a nearby bridge, but were
then beaten back by the central security services. One video uploaded on
to YouTube seemed to verify that account, appearing to show a largely
unprovoked line of police opening fire on demonstrators using tear gas.
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