Egypt's army-backed interim government is sprucing up Cairo's famed Tahrir Square ahead of planned celebrations in honor of the military this weekend. Supporters of ousted President Mohammed Morsi are also planning counter-rallies in the square, the center for Egypt's recent uprisings against successive leaders, raising the specter of renewed violent confrontations.
As both the military and its supporters and Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood group prepared their rival rallies, there was little sign of reconciliation. Europe's top diplomat Catherine Ashton was in Cairo today to meet with Egyptian leaders, but her visit appears to be more about keeping the lines of communication open.
There are no signs of an initiative on the table that could lead to the settlement. In a continuation of a crackdown on the Brotherhood, the Cabinet formed today a committee that includes judicial and intelligence officials to review the Brotherhood's assets, the first step toward implementing a recent court order banning the group and allowing its holdings to be confiscated.
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Sunday's rallies are highly symbolic. Egyptians commemorate on that day the 40th anniversary of its army's October 6 crossing of the Suez Canal during the 1973 war with Israel. The war is celebrated for Egypt's initial battlefield victories over Israel in a complex operation considered a significant military achievement.
The last major demonstrations in Tahrir were part of waves of protest against Morsi and in support of Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, the military chief who overthrew him.
Most of the Brotherhood's leadership and thousands of activists have been arrested in the wake of a deadly crackdown on two pro-Morsi protest camps on August 14, which also left hundreds dead.
Morsi's supporters have kept up street protests against the interim authorities, demanding that Morsi be reinstated and denouncing the military. Most of these however have been kept away from Tahrir, for now leaving this symbol of Egyptian popular power to the military.