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"We can smell the tear gas": The BBC's Quentin Sommerville reports from a balcony in central Cairo
Four
people have been killed in Egypt as supporters of ousted President
Mohammed Morsi clashed with opponents and security forces.
Medical officials said at least 40 others were hurt as gunfire and explosions rocked the centre of Cairo.
Troops used tear gas and live rounds to halt crowds heading to Tahrir Square.
The square has since been sealed off to prevent pro-Morsi
supporters occupying the symbolic heart of the 2011 uprising which
ousted Hosni Mubarak.
Reports said the four fatalities were all Brotherhood supporters who died amid fighting in two Cairo neighbourhoods.
As clashes broke out in the capital, state TV reported
further violence in the northern Sharqiya district and to the east in
Giza, as well as in the northern port city of Alexandria.
There were also reports of skirmishes between pro-Morsi demonstrators and civilian supporters of the military government.
Soldiers and civilians were hurt in the Cairo clashes
Early curfew
The BBC's correspondent in Cairo, Quentin Sommerville, said
that by early evening all was quiet on the streets of Cairo, ahead of
the early Friday curfew at 1900 local time (1700 GMT).
A heavy security presence remained, he said.
Hundreds of Islamist protesters have died in violence since
the Egyptian military deposed Mr Morsi in July, 13 months after he was
elected as president.
Thousands of members of the Muslim Brotherhood have also been detained over the past two months.
Several senior figures, including Mr Morsi and the movement's
general guide Mohammed Badie, are being held on charges such as
incitement to violence and murder.
Egyptian authorities portray the crackdown as a struggle
against "terrorism". They are preparing to seize Muslim Brotherhood
assets after appeal courts upheld a recent ban on its activities.
Anniversary plan
Our correspondent says the protesters in the capital's Agouza
district were chanting "Rabaa, Rabaa", a reference to the square next to
the Rabaa al-Adawiya mosque where a sit-in was cleared by force in
August.
Morsi supporters had said they would demonstrate ahead of the anniversary of the 1973 Arab-Israeli war on Sunday
Troops also took up positions on both sides of Qasr al-Nil Bridge, which leads to Tahrir Square.
As protesters pushed towards Tahrir, police and security
forces used teargas and warning shots fired overhead to disperse the
crowds.
Before Friday's clashes, soldiers and police tightened security around key sites in Cairo, including Tahrir.
Morsi supporters have said they will be intensifying their
demonstrations in the lead-up to Sunday's 40th anniversary of the 1973
Arab-Israeli war.
Opponents who back the army have also said they will take to the streets.
In a statement issued on Thursday, the Brotherhood sharply
criticised the officers behind the overthrow of Mr Morsi, comparing them
to Adolf Hitler, the Roman emperor Nero and the Mongol conqueror Hulagu
Khan.
It urged Egyptian soldiers to rebel and said it hoped that
Sunday would mark a "victory by the people over those who staged a coup
against them for personal gain".
On Thursday, the European Union's foreign policy chief,
Baroness Catherine Ashton, held talks with armed forces chief Gen Abdul
Fattah al-Sisi and interim President Adly Mansour, as well as with
religious leaders.
"I got a real sense of everyone really trying to go forward in the right way," she told reporters afterwards.
A day earlier, a 16-year-old boy was killed in clashes between Morsi supporters and opponents in the Red Sea city of Suez.
Many Morsi supporters used a four-finger salute, a symbol of the Rabaa al-Adawiya mosque where a sit-in was cleared in August
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