egypt\s ousted leader morsi doing \well\ says ashton
Last Updated : GMT 06:49:16
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Last Updated : GMT 06:49:16
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Foreign policy chief holds 2 hour talk with ex-president

Egypt's ousted leader Morsi doing 'well', says Ashton

Arab Today, arab today

Arab Today, arab today Egypt's ousted leader Morsi doing 'well', says Ashton

Egypt's Vice President Mohamed ElBaradei (R top) meets Catherine Ashton (L centre)
Cairo- Akram Ali

Egypt's Vice President Mohamed ElBaradei (R top) meets Catherine Ashton (L centre) The EU foreign policy chief held two hours of talks with the ousted Egyptian president as she pressed efforts on Tuesday to broker an end to an increasingly bloody crisis .
Catherine Ashton's intensive talks with leaders of both the army-installed interim government and the Islamist opposition came as supporters of Mohamed Morsi vowed no let-up in their demonstrations for his reinstatement despite weekend clashes that left 82 people dead.
"Morsi is well," Ashton told reporters.
"He has access to information in terms of TV, newspapers, so we were able to talk about the situation and we were able to talk about the need to move forward.
 "We had a friendly, open and very frank discussion," she added of their two-hour talks, declining to characterise Morsi's comments, or give details of where he is being held.
Morsi has been detained in custody since just hours after his overthrow in a July 3 coup following massive public protests.
However, according to diplomatic sources, Ashton proposed an initiative to resolve the current crisis to Morsi which would entail Islamist would again be included in the political arena and the crackdown against them would end, in exchange for calling off the demonstrations and sit-ins in Cairo’s in Rabaa al-?Adaweya Square.
The source added that Ashton also proposed to the former president to take charge of the situation by asking his supporters to end all protests in return for him and other Brotherhood members avoiding prosecution
Furthermore, the source noted that Ashton wanted to ensure that former president is being treated well and is in good health after several countries had demanded Egyptian authorities allow an international organisation to evaluate his conditions.?
On her last visit on July 17, Ashton unsuccessfully requested to meet the ousted president and urged his release.
This time, meeting him was a condition of her visit to Egypt, she said.
"I said that I would not come unless I could see him and that was freely offered to me."
Morsi is being held on suspicion of crimes relating to his escape from prison during the 2011 uprising that overthrew president Hosni Mubarak.
His supporters have rallied daily for his reinstatement and on Monday marched from a key Cairo sit-in to several security headquarters.
The marches raised fears of fresh clashes, but protesters kept their distance from security forces and headed back to their protest tent city after the demonstrations.
In the eastern city of Ismailia, however, a security source said clashes between Morsi supporters and opponents broke out, injuring 18.
The Anti-Coup Alliance called for a million-man march later on Tuesday under the banner of "Martyrs of the Coup" to commemorate its dead at a rally in Cairo on Saturday.
It urged Egyptians "to go out into the streets and squares, to regain their freedom and dignity -- that are being usurped by the bloody coup -- and for the rights of the martyrs assassinated by its bullets".
Khaled al-Khateeb, the head of the central administration of Egypt's emergency services, revised Saturday's death toll up to 82, including a police officer who died of his wounds.
The interim National Defence Council has urged protesters "not to exceed their rights to peaceful, responsible expression of their opinions," warning that they would face "decisive and firm decisions and actions in response to any violations".
Ashton, who arrived in Cairo late Sunday, held intensive meetings throughout Monday, including with army chief General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and army-installed interim president Adly Mansour.
She also met representatives of the pro-Morsi coalition, which said that "no initiatives" to resolve the crisis had been discussed.
"The coalition affirmed the Egyptian people will not leave streets and squares until constitutional legitimacy returns," the Islamist bloc said in a statement on Tuesday.
The persistent standoff has sparked mounting international concern and growing domestic criticism of the interim authorities.
A group of Egyptian NGOs called on Monday for Interior Minister Mohamed Ibrahim to be sacked for what it called Saturday's "massacre".
The bloodshed in the Arab world's most populous nation has sparked mounting international concern.
The White House on Monday “strongly” condemned the Egyptian military's crackdown but took no immediate steps to suspend US military assistance to Egypt.
White House spokesman Josh Earnest said the crackdown, in which 80 people were gunned down in Cairo, sets back the process of democratization in Egypt and does not square with the interim government's pledge to swiftly return to civilian rule.
But asked if the violence would prompt the United States to suspend aid to Egypt's military, Earnest said: "I don't have any change in our posture to report to you today." He said aid is under review, as it has been since Egypt's military takeover on July 3.
In its first comments on the bloodshed, the interim presidency said Sunday that it was "saddened" by the deaths, but dubbed the protest area where they occurred a "terror-originating spot".
A crackdown on Morsi supporters continued on Monday, with the arrest of the president and vice president of the moderate Islamist Wasat party, which has protested the July 3 coup.
In the Sinai Peninsula meanwhile, a security source said two policemen were killed in separate shooting attacks in El-Arish.
And in Cairo, 15 people were killed in a brawl between street ven

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