CAIRO: Egyptian police detained seven men accused of using
Facebook for inciting people against the security forces, the Interior Ministry said on Thursday,
clamping down on internet activism by supporters of deposed President Mohammad
Morsi. It said the men, aged between 21 and 43, were behind an array of
Facebook sites, some of which had published the addresses of policemen. It follows the Feb. 16
announcement of the arrest of 14 other Muslim Brotherhood activists on similar
charges. Morsi's supporters have drawn extensively on Facebook as a means
to organise since July, when the Islamist politician was deposed by the military after mass protests
against his rule and the state launched a fierce crackdown on his
backers. While the police have pressed the crackdown, bombings and
shootings targeting the security forces have become commonplace. The state says it is facing a
terrorist campaign it has vowed to crush.
The Interior Ministry
statement named one of the Facebook sites as "The Pulse of Rabaa" - a reference to the pro-Morsi
protest camp broken up by the security forces on Aug. 14. Hundreds of Morsi supporters were killed
in that operation. It said the security forces had traced the users'
"electronic footprint" to catch them. The Interior Ministry spokesman declined to give further
details. The government accuses the Brotherhood of carrying out the
violence, saying it has turned to terrorism - a charge the Islamist group denies. Thousands of Morsi
supporters have been arrested since he was overthrown.
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