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Thousands of supporters of deposed Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi demonstrated outside the prime minister's office and marched through Cairo on Wednesday to protest against a military-backed cabinet on its first full day at work.
Islamist protesters held up Korans and portraits of Morsi in the noon heat outside the main government buildings, demanding Morsi be restored to power following his overthrow by the army. They shouted "God is Greatest!", "Down with military rule!" and "We are all Morsi!"
Crisis in Egypt, which straddles the Suez Canal and has a peace treaty with Israel, has alarmed allies in the West.
European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton became the latest international figure to visit Egypt's interim rulers. Unlike a US envoy who came two days ago, she was also expected to meet senior figures in Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood.
The army, which removed Egypt's first freely-elected president two weeks ago, accused Morsi's supporters of inciting armed demonstrations near military bases.
However, the afternoon's protest was mostly peacefully although there were scuffles when the crowd marched through the city centre and along the Nile riverbank, held back by riot police as they approached Tahrir Square, focus for anti-Morsi protests.
"We have only two goals, legitimacy or martyrdom," said Ahmed Ouda, 27. Another man interrupted to add: "Peaceful martyrdom!"
A few dozen youths wearing construction helmets and armed with sticks tried to charge at the Brotherhood supporters being held back by police. Eventually the crowd dispersed.
Egypt swore in an interim cabinet on Tuesday of 33 ministers, mostly technocrats and liberals. Not one was drawn from the two main Islamist factions that won five straight elections since a 2011 uprising toppled autocrat Hosni Mubarak.
"Does it believe in itself? Does anybody?" Essam El-Erian, a senior leader in Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood, said on Facebook of the new cabinet. "How can it have any authority when it knows that with one word from the military all its members can be sent home on pain of being arrested?"
Tuesday's swearing-in took place in an ornate hall hours after seven people were killed and more than 260 wounded in overnight street battles between Morsi supporters and the security forces, marking the worst violence in a week.
"I am going to Egypt to reinforce our message that there must be a fully inclusive political process, taking in all groups which support democracy," Ashton said in a statement before her trip. "I will underline that Egypt needs to return as rapidly as possible to its democratic transition."
Mohamed Bishr, a member of the Brotherhood's 17-strong advisory council and former minister in Morsi's government, told Reuters he and others would meet Ashton "to express our position on legitimacy and democracy with the hope that they will aid democracy and respect the choices made by the Egyptian people".
Morsi has been held at an undisclosed location and has not been charged with a crime, although the authorities have announced investigations into complaints of spying, inciting violence and wrecking the economy. Prosecutors have also reopened a 2011 jailbreaking case over Morsi's escape from brief detention during protests against Mubarak.
"ROAD MAP"
The interim cabinet is charged with implementing an army-backed "road map" to restore civilian rule, which foresees parliamentary elections in as little as six months. Its main task is salvaging an economy wrecked by two and a half years of turmoil. For that, it has been given a lifeline of $12 billion in aid from rich Gulf Arab states.
Many of the new cabinet ministers are supporters of deep economic reforms demanded by the International Monetary Fund in return for a stalled rescue loan, but investors are sceptical those reforms will be implemented soon. The new planning minister has said it is too soon to restart IMF talks and the Arab cash is enough to sustain Egypt through its transition.
Ashton could offer the EU as a mediator. Brussels is not as big a donor to Egypt as the United States but is also less polarising, and tried in the past to mediate between Morsi and his opponents.
On her last visit, in April, Ashton tried to persuade Morsi to sign up to a power-sharing deal brokered by an EU envoy with the Islamist's opponents. Morsi did not respond.
KIDNAPPED?
Morsi's supporters say he has been "kidnapped"; a military spokesman said he was being held for his own protection.
Morsi was "not detained, but the armed forces took certain measures for his protection, because he has supporters and opponents and in light of the lack of stability in the Egyptian streets", the spokesman, Ahmed Mohamed Ali, told Al Arabiya TV.
He denied the military was involved in politics: "There is no presence for us on the political scene. There is a president for the state, and a cabinet has been formed. We are out of the picture totally and do not desire rule."
However, the new cabinet includes the armed forces chief, Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, in the joint roles of first deputy prime minister and defence minister.
The Brotherhood has maintained a vigil into its third week, with thousands of supporters camped out in a Cairo square vowing not to leave unless Morsi is restored to office. It has called protests attracting tens of thousands of people every few days.
Running street battles in the early hours of Tuesday were the deadliest in a week. Before that, more than 90 people were killed in the first five days after Morsi was removed, more than half of them shot dead by troops outside a Cairo barracks.
Military spokesman Ali accused the Brotherhood of "a campaign of incitement that attempts to depict political differences as religious differences. There is incitement to target military installations and headquarters, and this is something totally unacceptable in Egypt or in any country".
The authorities have charged the Brotherhood's main leaders with inciting violence during the protests, although in most cases they have not followed through with arrests.
In the lawless Sinai peninsular bordering Israel and the Palestinian Gaza Strip, Islamist militants have called for an uprising against Egypt's military.
At least 13 mainly security personnel have been killed there since Morsi's overthrow on July 3, and late on Tuesday attackers used rockets and machine guns against an Egyptian army camp near Rafah, a town straddling Sinai and Gaza. Two soldiers were wounded.
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