Ahmed Hassan-Cairo

Six years have passed since the fateful day of Egypt's history, when thousands of protesters protested against the military coup, which led to the country's first free democratic experiment.

On Wednesday, August 14, 2013, Rabaa al-Adawiya, east and west of Cairo, had the largest share of casualties, along with media and human rights focus. However, Egypt witnessed that day and the ensuing bloody events that killed many people in various fields and areas. Over the country.

The sit-in resulted in 632 deaths, including eight policemen, according to the National Council for Human Rights (government), while local and international human rights organizations (unofficial) said that the number of victims exceeded a thousand dead.

In this report we observe the most forgotten massacres - during the process of disbanding and beyond - including the dispersal of protesters at the Iman Mosque in Nasr City, as well as the massacres of Mustafa Mahmoud Square engineers, and the tunnel Nasr al-Din Street Haram Street and events of Ramses II, according to official accounts, media and human rights, and witnesses to the island Net .

The road to Rabaa

On June 23, 2013, supporters of the late President Mohamed Morsi began a sit-in in the fields of Rabaa Adawiya and Ennahda in support of legitimacy, in exchange for calls for early presidential elections that escalated, about a year after Morsi's rise to power.

It was only a few days before President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, then defense minister, announced the overthrow of Morsi on the evening of July 3, 2013, in the wake of demonstrations against Morsi, with the support of Al-Azhar, the Church, and other political and youth opposition forces.

In parallel to the killings and arrests of Morsi's supporters during the sit-in (most notably events between Al-Sarayat, the Republican Guard, and the podium), Rabaa and Ennahda topped the rejectionist speeches.

At 6 am on Wednesday, August 14, 2013, the police and army began enforcing the sit-in by force, leaving hundreds of dead, injured and detained, as well as forcibly disappeared.

Faith .. The kiss of the martyrs

At the end of the day, a large number of protesters left for the Iman mosque near Rabaa Square, while the mosque was filled with dozens of bodies taken from the main sit-in.

The mosque turned after the opening, from a kiss of prayer to a kiss of the martyrs, with the passage of time no longer opens the doors only to receive a new guest in blood.

Screams, wailing and gaze await the silence of identity papers and shrouds with the names of the martyrs. Shortly after the night, troops surrounded the mosque with allegations of gunmen shortly before it was stormed.

Second Friday of Fury

Two days after the sit-in broke up, demonstrators reorganized and marched after Friday prayers to Ramsis Square (central Cairo), which was dispersed by security forces by excessive force, killing at least 210 protesters in the square, the vicinity of Al-Fath Mosque and the Azbakia police station. Forensic Medicine.

The events began with the launching of funeral marches of the dead, from several mosques in Cairo, towards the mosque of the conquest of Ramses Square, where they joined several other marches that came out of several areas in Giza.

Security forces then stepped up their assault on the protesters, and hundreds of them were trapped inside the al-Fath mosque, while pro-Palestinian media broadcast a frantic campaign to demonize them.

Then, army leaders entered into negotiations to provide a safe exit for those trapped inside the mosque, amid calls to march to the conquest of Fatah to save the protesters inside.

As soon as the mosque opened its doors to the exit of those inside, not everyone was allowed to return to their homes, where a number of them were placed in deportation cars and army armored vehicles, were transferred for questioning, and transferred to five hundred for trial on charges of violence and murder.

Abu Zaabal deportations

A police deportation car, no more than eight meters away, without an air outlet, was placed inside dozens of dissidents and supporters who were randomly arrested after the break, as they were on their way to Abu Zaabal prison.

On August 18, four days after Rabaa was dismantled, Egyptians woke up to a new crime that killed 37 people after police fired a barrage of tear gas and poisonous gases that burned or suffocated them.

Nasreddin

In Nasr El-Din area on the first pyramid street and near Ennahda Square, protesters gathered their diaspora after breaking up the sit-in, and set up an alternative platform, amid gunfire by the army that amounted to the use of grenovs (a Belgian machine gun).

The hours were bloody, and extended until the early hours of the day after the sit-ins broke, and 57 people were killed that night.

The hit-and-run protesters did not help the army and police, backed by helicopters and snipers, as well as "honorable citizens," a term given to supporters of the new authority who were ruthlessly opposed by the police and army.

Mustafa Mahmoud

As protesters dug in Nasr al-Din, others went to Mustafa Mahmoud Square, near Nahda Square, in a short-lived sit-in.

The sit-in platform Mustafa Mahmoud killed 66 people, shot by the army and police, packed with field hospital, in addition to dozens of injured.

In the vicinity of Mustafa Mahmoud Square, clashes resumed on the afternoon of the afternoon on Batal Ahmed Abdel Aziz Street in Giza, wounding several demonstrators.

Provincial ins

Demonstrations condemning the dissolution of Rabaa and Ennahda have spread to many fields in Egypt.

The Egyptian Health Ministry said at least 95 people were killed and more than 800 injured during the clashes in 10 governorates - Cairo, Giza, Alexandria, Suez, Beheira, Minya, Dakahlia, Assiut, Sohag and Luxor.