Cairo:
A video footage of a man beaten and dragged naked by
policemen in Cairo triggered an outrage in Egypt on Saturday and prompted calls
for Interior Minister Mohammed Ibrahim to resign.
But hours after the presidency expressed disappointment over
the incident and Ibrahim offered to resign, the man told state television the
policemen were actually trying to save him from protesters -- a claim quickly
dismissed by his relatives.
Footage of the incident was broadcast live on television
during protests on Friday night against Islamist President Mohamed Morsi.
It has since gone viral on the Internet, triggering an
outpouring of condemnation on social media websites.
In the video, riot police can be seen beating a man in his
50s before he was dragged into an armoured vehicle in front of the presidential
palace.
"The horrible and degrading images showing the central
security officers and police beating and dragging a naked man near the
presidential palace should lead to the interior minister's immediate
resignation," said Khaled Dawoud, spokesman for the main opposition
National Salvation Front (NSF).
The presidency said it was "pained by the shocking
footage of some policemen treating a protester in a manner that does not accord
with human dignity and human rights."
It would follow the interior ministry's investigation of
what it called an "isolated act."
Ibrahim's office said he had ordered a probe to "hold
accountable" those who beat the man, and that he would resign if
"that's what the people want."
Prosecutors say Saber, a 50-year-old construction painter
sent to a police hospital, was found carrying petrol bombs.
Late on Saturday, Saber, in an interview with state
television, said the police were actually saving him from protesters.
"They gathered around me and roughed me up. They took
my clothes then they said 'hey, this guy isn't a policeman, he's an old
man,'" Saber said from his hospital bed.
Then, he said, "I tried to resist the police because I
didn't want to get into their armoured vehicle, but then I realised that they
were trying to save me."
But minutes after his interview, relatives dismissed his
claim.
"He's lying, he is scared," his daughter, Randa,
told state television.
And an unnamed man claiming to be Saber's nephew said he
"is lying because there is lot of pressure on him."
On Friday night people had taken to the streets in several
cities in response to an NSF call for a show of opposition to Morsi and his
Muslim Brotherhood after deadly unrest swept Egypt last week in the worst
violence since the president was elected in June.
Hours before Friday's violence erupted, NSF leader Mohamed
ElBaradei had suggested unrest would persist if Morsi kept sidelining his
opponents.
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