Fresh clashes in troubled Egypt Nile Delta town
CAIRO (Reuters) - Clashes broke out between police and protesters in the Nile Delta textile town of Mahalla el-Kubra for the second straight day on Monday and the protesters set fire to several shops, witnesses said.
Thousands of youngsters threw stones at riot police and the riot police fired tear gas to disperse them, they added.
"They (the protesters) are roaming from street to street in enormous numbers and fighting with the security forces," said one witness, who asked not to be named.
"They are chanting: 'Enough, it's too much,'" he added.
Clashes started on Sunday when the day shift ended at a giant textile mill where the workers had planned to go on strike for higher wages and protest against high prices.
Plainclothes security men inside the factory kept the workers apart from each other and made sure they worked.
More than 60 people remained in hospital on Monday with injuries from the clashes and hundreds of others had breathing problems from tear gas. Two schools, two ATM machines, five cars and 11 shops were burned or damaged, police sources said.
Four people lost eyes on Sunday when the police hit them with rubber bullets, a medical source said.
On Monday the trigger for unrest appears to have been the arrival of Egypt's prosecutor general, Abdel Magid Mahmoud, on a tour of inspection of the damage in Mahalla. Protesters threw stones at his motorcade, the witness said. Continued...






