• 21:42
  • Wednesday ,12 June 2013
العربية

Police keep peace between rival protests at Egyptian culture ministry

By Ahram Online

Home News

00:06

Wednesday ,12 June 2013

Police keep peace between rival protests at Egyptian culture ministry

A protest by artists outside the culture ministry in Cairo’s Zamalek district was met by angry opposition from groups of Islamists on Tuesday

On Tuesday morning, members of Islamist parties announced they would be going to a protest currently being held by disgruntled artists and intellectuals at the culture ministry, to force the protesters to leave.
 
The protesting artists called for supporters to join them, and police forces at the protest increased in number in anticipation of possible clashes.
 
The artists gathered outside the ministry, which they broke into to “occupy” on Wednesday, chanting against the Muslim Brotherhood and singing songs by Egyptian revolutionary icons such as Sheikh Imam.
 
They were opposed by angry demonstrators from the Freedom and Justice Party and the Building and Development Party, the political arm of the ultra-conservative Al-Gamaa Al-Islamiya group, who chanted: "Clean up [the ministry], clean up, minister.”
 
Minor scuffles occurred between the two sides, resulting in the injury of a policeman. However, the situation was contained and the Islamists left the scene without further incident. 
 
Protests by angry artists started two weeks ago when newly-appointed culture minister Alaa Abdel-Aziz sacked head of the Cairo Opera House Ines Abdel-Dayem and other senior culture officials. Many members of Egypt’s arts and culture scene reacted with outrage, warning of attempts to “Islamise” or “destroy” Egypt’s culture.
 
Employees of the Opera house refused to perform and declared a strike, which ended after a few days when a new chairperson of the Cairo Opera House was put in place.
 
Abdel-Aziz continued his policy of dismissals, leading to renewed protests this week.