With
universities experiencing their worst unrest in years, Egypt’s
military-backed authorities have ordered police deployment on campuses
to maintain order during the mid-year examinations that run until late
January.
Several universities, especially Al
Azhar, have been rocked in recent months by violent protests blamed on
students backing ousted Islamist president Mohamed Morsi – and police
clampdowns on demonstrators.
Al Azhar – Egypt’s major Islamic
seminary, which is viewed as a stronghold of Islamist students – has
been the scene of frequent violence since the academic year began last
October. The institution and its dormitories have seen repeated clashes
between pro-Morsi students and security forces.
The students, protesting the army’s July
overthrow of Morsi, have been accused of torching several buildings on
campus and attacking lecturers believed to be supporting the military.
At least three students have been killed
in the Al Azhar unrest, while more than 100 others have been arrested
on charges of involvement in violence.
There were more protests last week, with
students burning tyres and clashing with police, who retaliated with
rubber bullets. In the Nile Delta, six students were reportedly injured
when police quelled a pro-Morsi demonstration at Zagazig University.
The Higher Council for Universities,
which is in charge of academic institutions in Egypt, has said that the
decision to deploy police on campuses is aimed at “foiling” an alleged
plan by pro-Morsi students to disrupt the mid-year exams.
“The council has decided [to slap] a
complete ban on demonstrations in universities during the exam
duration,” said Ashraf el-Sheehi, president of the state-owned Zagazig
University and a member of the council.
Despite the ban, intermittent campus protests persist, mainly at Al Azhar University.
Footage on pro-army TV stations last
week showed what were said to be attacks by pro-Morsi students at Al
Azhar against fellow students taking exams. Pro-Morsi students say their
protests are in response to what they call the police’s “brutal
violence” on campus.
Local media and academic authorities
said university regulations would be amended to allow expulsion of
students found guilty of committing “subversive or terrorist acts” on
campus following swift investigations. Punished students will have the
right to appeal against their dismissal.
University authorities have complained
that regulations in place since the early 1970s make it hard for them to
expel students involved in rioting on campus.
The proposed amendment comes less than a
month after the Egyptian government declared Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood
a terrorist group. Terrorist crimes in Egypt are punishable by death.
Gaber Nassar, president of Cairo University, has said that the deployment of police has curbed violence on the campus.
“Our university has installed
surveillance cameras to monitor the campus and ensure security for
students,” he said. “The administrative security personnel in Egypt’s
universities are not well-prepared. They need more training.”
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