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Egypt Uprising:Mohamed Morsi underpressure by half Egyptian people / Middle East News

Egyptian protesters gather outside the presidential palace after they broke through a barbed wire barricade that was keeping them from getting closer to the presidential palace, in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Dec. 7, 2012. Egypt's political crisis spiraled deeper into bitterness and recrimination Friday as thousands of Islamist backers of the president vowed vengeance at a funeral for men killed in bloody clashes earlier this week and large crowds of the president's opponents marched on his palace to increase pressure after he rejected their demands.
Egyptian protesters gather outside the presidential palace after they broke through a barbed wire barricade that was keeping them from getting closer to the presidential palace, in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Dec. 7, 2012. Egypt's political crisis spiraled deeper into bitterness and recrimination Friday as thousands of Islamist backers of the president vowed vengeance at a funeral for men killed in bloody clashes earlier this week and large crowds of the president's opponents marched on his palace to increase pressure after he rejected their demands.

Half of the people Egypt does not want live the state of the Muslim Brotherhood in  Sharia pressure regime.

In fact Egypt’s elections showed the country divided into two. 50.6% of votes had Mohamed Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood half of the people of Egypt did not support this formation.

Tried to put the constitution of Islamic fascism, however, behave in a hurry Morsi mask fell off. Now the people of Egypt in the future to manage themselves with the dictatorship of Islam declared war on the idea

Tens of thousands of protesters have demonstrated overnight outside Egypt’s presidential palace, calling on President Mohamed Morsi to step down.

The peaceful night-time demonstration followed a tense day in which Mr Morsi’s opponents broke through a barbed-wire security barricade outside the palace, climbing on army tanks and waving flags.

Some protesters overnight chanted “Leave! Leave!” to Mr Morsi, who is backed by the Muslim Brotherhood, while others daubed walls with graffiti and cartoons.

One caricature portrayed Mr Morsi with blood on his mouth, another depicted him as a pharaoh – a reference to a recent decree that expanded his powers and barred court challenges to his decisions.

After the night of protests, the streets of Cairo were calm.

A referendum on a new draft constitution opposed by liberals is set for December 15, and Mr Morsi has called for talks with the opposition to discuss how Egypt should move forward after the vote.

Amid the protests, Mr Morsi’s deputy has raised the possibility that the referendum might be delayed.

But major opposition leaders have rejected Mr Morsi’s call dialogue.

The unrest is the worst since last year’s revolution, which toppled ex-president Hosni Mubarak, and the subsequent vote that made Mr Morsi the country’s first freely elected leader.

At least six people have been killed and almost 700 injured in clashes around the palace.

“We will stay here for as long as it takes and will continue to organise protests elsewhere until President Morsi cancels his constitutional decree and postpones the referendum,” said Ahmed Essam, 28, a computer engineer who took part in the overnight protest.

The upheaval in the most populous Arab nation worries the West, in particular the United States, which has given it billions of dollars in military and other aid since Egypt made peace with Israel in 1979.

US President Barack Obama called Mr Morsi on Thursday to express his “deep concern” over the deaths and injuries.

He welcomed the offer of talks but warned they should be entered into “without preconditions”, a White House spokesman said.

Meanwhile, Egypt’s election committee has postponed to Wednesday the start of expatriate voting in the constitutional referendum, originally planned for Saturday.

The committee did not say whether the delay would affect the date of the referendum.

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