A ministerial meeting is being held in the cabinet headquarter now to tackle the clashes taking place in Maspero area. Ministers of Health, Interior, Information as well as Premier Essam Sharaf are in the open-ended meeting.
"What is taking place in Egypt is not a sectarian strife but a plan to divide the country," Prime Minister Essam Sharaf said ahead of the cabinet meeting.
According to Egypt's Minister of Health, the incidents left 23 killed and more than 193 injured.
he Copts - who make up about 10% of the population - accuse the governing military council of being too lenient on the perpetrators of a string of anti-Christian attacks.
Prime minister Essam Sharaf appealed to Egyptians not to give in to sectarian strife.
"What is taking place are not clashes between Muslims and Christians but attempts to provoke chaos and dissent," he said on his Facebook page.
State TV has announce a curfew in some parts of Cairo from 02:00 to 07:00 local time (00:00 to 05:00 GMT).
Thousands - mainly but not exclusively Christians - joined the initial march from the Shubra district of northern Cairo to the state TV building in Maspero Square where they intended to hold a sit-in.
They were calling on the military council to sack the governor of Aswan province. They also accused state TV of fanning the flames of anti-Christian agitation.
But the demonstrators said they were assaulted by attackers in plain clothes before the clashes with the security forces broke out.
The clashes began outside the state TV building but soon spread to Tahrir Square, the epicentre of the demonstrations which led to President Mubarak's resignation.
Thousands joined in the street violence, hurling stones and tearing up the pavement for ammunition.
Smoke from tear gas and burning military vehicles filled the air in Maspero Square. Some protesters reported hearing gunfire.
Eyewitness Nigel Hetherington says troops fired rubber bullets and teargas into crowds. "I saw civilians running past my window as troops fired wildly into the crowds," he told the BBC.
The Egyptian health ministry said 23 people had been killed and 174 injured.
It is not clear how many of those killed were soldiers and how many were demonstrators.
Simmering tensions
Protesters also called for the resignation of the military council, in particular its chairman, Field Marshal Mohamed Tantawi.
The BBC's Yolande Knell in Cairo says sectarian tensions have simmered in the political and security vacuum that has developed in the past couple of months.
As well as the clashes between police and protesters, other groups of thugs were also involved, our correspondent says - part of the pattern of sectarian violence in Egypt.
Christians have been worried by the increasing show of strength by ultra-conservative Islamists.
In May, 12 people died in attacks on Coptic churches. In March, 13 people were killed in clashes between Muslims and Copts in Tahrir Square.
This latest violence comes ahead of parliamentary elections scheduled for 28 November, the first such vote since President Mubarak stepped down.
The Copts, the largest minority in Egypt, complain of discrimination, including a law requiring presidential permission for churches to be built. Egypt only recognises conversions from Christianity to Islam, not the other way.
"What is taking place in Egypt is not a sectarian strife but a plan to divide the country," Prime Minister Essam Sharaf said ahead of the cabinet meeting.
According to Egypt's Minister of Health, the incidents left 23 killed and more than 193 injured.
he Copts - who make up about 10% of the population - accuse the governing military council of being too lenient on the perpetrators of a string of anti-Christian attacks.
Prime minister Essam Sharaf appealed to Egyptians not to give in to sectarian strife.
"What is taking place are not clashes between Muslims and Christians but attempts to provoke chaos and dissent," he said on his Facebook page.
State TV has announce a curfew in some parts of Cairo from 02:00 to 07:00 local time (00:00 to 05:00 GMT).
Thousands - mainly but not exclusively Christians - joined the initial march from the Shubra district of northern Cairo to the state TV building in Maspero Square where they intended to hold a sit-in.
They were calling on the military council to sack the governor of Aswan province. They also accused state TV of fanning the flames of anti-Christian agitation.
But the demonstrators said they were assaulted by attackers in plain clothes before the clashes with the security forces broke out.
The clashes began outside the state TV building but soon spread to Tahrir Square, the epicentre of the demonstrations which led to President Mubarak's resignation.
Thousands joined in the street violence, hurling stones and tearing up the pavement for ammunition.
Smoke from tear gas and burning military vehicles filled the air in Maspero Square. Some protesters reported hearing gunfire.
Eyewitness Nigel Hetherington says troops fired rubber bullets and teargas into crowds. "I saw civilians running past my window as troops fired wildly into the crowds," he told the BBC.
The Egyptian health ministry said 23 people had been killed and 174 injured.
It is not clear how many of those killed were soldiers and how many were demonstrators.
Simmering tensions
Protesters also called for the resignation of the military council, in particular its chairman, Field Marshal Mohamed Tantawi.
The BBC's Yolande Knell in Cairo says sectarian tensions have simmered in the political and security vacuum that has developed in the past couple of months.
As well as the clashes between police and protesters, other groups of thugs were also involved, our correspondent says - part of the pattern of sectarian violence in Egypt.
Christians have been worried by the increasing show of strength by ultra-conservative Islamists.
In May, 12 people died in attacks on Coptic churches. In March, 13 people were killed in clashes between Muslims and Copts in Tahrir Square.
This latest violence comes ahead of parliamentary elections scheduled for 28 November, the first such vote since President Mubarak stepped down.
The Copts, the largest minority in Egypt, complain of discrimination, including a law requiring presidential permission for churches to be built. Egypt only recognises conversions from Christianity to Islam, not the other way.
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