CAIRO (AFP) - Heavy gunfire could be heard as clashes between troops and anti-military protesters spread around the defence ministry in Cairo on Friday, leaving 59 injured according to the health ministry.
The health ministry said most of the injured had been treated on the spot in the Abbassiya neighbourhood, where military police had used tear gas and water cannon under a volley of rocks hurled from both sides.
"During the clashes in Abbassiya, 59 people were injured... of those five are being treated in hospital," said health ministry official Ahmed Al-Ansary in a statement.
Protesters and military police faced off in Abbassiya separated by barbed wire, before troops charged the protesters and began chasing them down the roads leading off the main square.
Heavy gunfire could be heard, an AFP reporter said.
A security official told AFP that the army had fired warning shots in the air in a bid to disperse the protesters.
A military source said that the army had chased down the protesters "with the help of Abbassiya residents and police forces", arresting 40 people he described as "thugs."
Thousands of anti-military protesters took to the streets in both Cairo and Alexandria, days after deadly clashes near the defence ministry raised tensions ahead of landmark presidential elections later this month.


Titus Glover slams Mahama’s flood report directive, calls it “waste of energy an...
We have increased posting of doctors from 12 to 100 to underserved regions in 20...
'You had the effrontery to call me struggling lawyer, you won't come back to pow...
Belarus manufacturers to storm Ghana next week after President's visit
Government to offer tax incentives for factories located outside Accra
White House World Cup chief defends visa ban for Somali referee, Iranians
Talensi DCE courts investors for revival of Pwalugu Tomato Factory
Manhyia South MP says free speech under threat, cites 17 arrests in 16 months un...
Health Minister’s suspension of KATH CEO technically right — Prof Beyuo
Korle Bu Teaching Hospital conducts Ebola emergency simulation to strengthen fro...
