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Christians protest over attacks

Several hundred Christians pelted police with rocks outside a Cairo hospital on Monday in fresh clashes the day after 24 people died in riots that grew out of a Christian protest against a church attack.

Sunday’s sectarian violence was the worst in Egypt since the uprising that ousted Hosni Mubarak in February.

Egyptian Prime Minister Essam Sharaf warned in a televised address that the riots were another setback on the country’s already fraught transition to civilian rule after three decades of Mubarak’s authoritarian government.

“These events have taken us back several steps,” Sharaf said.

The clashes Sunday night raged over a large section of downtown Cairo and drew in Christians, Muslims and security forces.

They began when about 1,000 Christian protesters tried to stage a sit-in  outside the state television building along the Nile in downtown Cairo.

The protesters said they were attacked by “thugs” with sticks and the violence then spiralled out of control after a speeding military vehicle jumped up onto a sidewalk and rammed into some of the Christians.

Most of the 24 people killed were Coptic Christians, though officials said at least three soldiers were among the dead. Nearly 300 people were injured.

The latest clashes Monday broke out outside the Coptic hospital where many of the Christian victims were taken the night before.

The screams of grieving women rang out from inside the hospital and  some of the hundreds of men gathered outside held wooden crosses.

Empty coffins were lined up outside the hospital.

There were no word on casualties from Monday’s clashes.

Christians, who make up about 10% of Egypt’s 85 million people, blame the ruling military council for being too lenient on those behind a spate of anti-Christian attacks since Mubarak’s ouster.

The chaotic power transition has left a security vacuum, and the Coptic Christian minority is particularly worried about a show of force by ultraconservative Islamists, known as Salafis.

The ruling military council led by Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, defence minister of 20 years under Mubarak’s former regime, took over after the 18-day popular uprising forced Mubarak to step down.

The military initially pledged to hand back power to a civilian administration in six months, but that deadline has passed, with parliamentary elections now scheduled to start in late November.

According to a timetable floated by the generals, presidential elections could be held late next year.

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