Morsi’s supporters storm state building in Cairo

Official death toll in crackdown put at 623

Supporters of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood stormed and torched a government building in Cairo today, while families tried to identify hundreds of mutilated bodies piled in a Cairo mosque a day after they were shot dead by the security forces.

Egypt’s government revised to 623 the number of people killed and said thousands wounded in the worst day of civil violence in the modern history of the most populous Arab state.

Brotherhood supporters say the death toll is far higher, with hundreds of bodies as yet uncounted by the authorities whose troops and police crushed protests seeking the return of deposed Islamist president Mohamed Morsi.

The United Nations Security Council was to hold a closed emergency meeting on the situation in Egypt today at 5:30pm local time in New York, according to an announcement from the UN.

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Deputy secretary-general Jan Eliasson was to brief the council, according to the announcement. The UK, France and Australia had earlier called for an urgent Security Council meeting on the violence.

International condemnation has rained down on Cairo’s military-backed rulers for ordering the storming of pro-Morsi protest camps after dawn yesterday, six weeks after the army overthrew the country’s first freely elected leader.

US president Barack Obama cancelled plans for upcoming military exercises with the Egyptian army, which Washington funds with $1.3 billion in annual aid.

"The United States strongly condemns the steps that have been taken by Egypt's interim government and security forces," Mr Obama said in an address from his vacation home on the Massachusetts island of Martha's Vineyard. "We deplore violence against civilians. We support universal rights essential to human dignity, including the right to peaceful protest."

Western diplomatic sources have said senior US and European officials were in contact with Egypt’s rulers until the final hour, pleading with them not to order a military crackdown on the protest camps, where thousands of Mr Morsi’s followers had been camped out since before he was toppled.

There were reports of protests today but no repeat of the previous day’s bloodbath.

In Alexandria, Egypt's second largest city, hundreds marched, chanting: "We will come back again for the sake of our martyrs!"

Brotherhood spokesman Gehad El-Haddad said anger within the 85-year-old Islamist movement, which has millions of supporters across Egypt, was beyond control. “After the blows and arrests and killings that we are facing, emotions are too high to be guided by anyone,” he said.

The Brotherhood has called on followers to march in Cairo tonigh, while funeral processions for those who died provide further potential flashpoints over the coming days.

In Cairo, Reuters counted 228 bodies, most of them wrapped in white shrouds, arranged in rows on the floor of the Al-Imam mosque in northeast Cairo, close to the worst of the violence.

The mosque had been converted into a charnel house, resembling the aftermath of a first World War battlefield. Medics pushed burning incense sticks into blocks of ice covering the bodies and sprayed air freshener to cover up the stench. Some men pulled back the shrouds to reveal badly charred corpses with smashed skulls. Women knelt and wept beside one body. Two men embraced each other and shed tears by another.

The bodies, piled there because morgues and hospitals were full, did not appear to be part of the official tally of 525 killed, which also includes more than 40 police and hundreds killed in clashes outside of the capital.

Several thousand people gathered in the square outside the mosque, chanting. They held up posters of Mr Morsi and shouted: “The people want the execution of the butcher!”

In the Giza section of Cairo, Morsi supporters set fire to a governorate building. Smoke poured out of the windows as fire trucks arrived.

Army chief General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi removed Mr Morsi from power on July 3rd in the wake of huge protests by people frustrated at a lack of progress on economic reform and wary of what they saw as a creeping Islamist power grab. The subsequent crackdown suggests an end to the open political role of the Brotherhood, which survived underground for decades before emerging as Egypt's dominant force after autocrat Hosni Mubarak was toppled in a 2011 uprising.

Shocking scenes, including television footage of unarmed protesters dropping to the ground as security forces opened fire, have been seen around the world.But many Egyptians stridently support the crackdown and bitterly resent international criticism of the army, underlining how deeply divided society has become.

Churches around the country were attacked and many torched yesterday, manifesting the fear of an Islamist backlash among the Christian minority that makes up 10 per cent of the population of 85 million.

The authorities and their allies, which control nearly all media inside Egypt, insist those inside the pro-Morsi camps were heavily armed, although international journalists have seen only limited evidence of weapons beyond sticks and rocks.

Cairo and other areas were largely calm overnight, after the army-installed government declared a month-long state of emergency and imposed a dusk-to-dawn curfew on the capital and 10 other provinces.

In other examples of international condemnation, French president Francois Hollande summoned the Egyptian ambassador to demand an immediate halt to the crackdown. “The head of state asserted that everything must be done to avoid civil war,” the Elysee Palace said in a statement.

In Ankara, Turkish prime minister Tayyip Erdogan called for the UN Security Council to convene quickly and act after what he described as a "massacre" in Egypt.

UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay called on all sides to “step back from the brink of disaster”. Ms Pillay, a former UN war crimes judge, said the death toll pointed to “an excessive, even extreme use of force against demonstrators”.

But the United Arab Emirates, one of several Gulf Arab states which collectively sent $12 billion to fund the interim government, expressed support for the crackdown, saying the Egyptian government had “exercised maximum self-control”.

Reuters