The beating was caught on camera
by The Associated Press, and the video was broadcast live on Egyptian
television late Friday as protests raged in the streets outside the presidential palace. The AP video showed police trying to bundle the naked man into a police van after beating him.
The beating prompted a rare statement of regret from the Interior Ministry,
which promised to investigate the attack. The president's office said
it was pained by the images and called the assault "shocking."
A new video emerged online Sunday of Hamda Saber
in a hospital bed telling activists that police apologized for any
wrongdoing. A male and female are heard urging him to speak honestly and
not to accept any payments for absolving police in any abuse.
Saber was receiving treatment at a police hospital
when he told prosecutors that protesters undressed him during clashes,
denying police assaulted him. Later, speaking in a telephone interview
to the Egyptian satellite channel al-Hayat, Saber said he changed his
story to blame police after pressure from family and friends.
State prosecutors have since moved him to a public hospital."I said police are the ones who beat me," Saber tells the TV presenter. "By the time I reached the armored car, they had undressed me and my pants and were still dragging me."
On Sunday a 20-year-old man wounded in Friday's clashes died in a hospital. He was the second to die from the violence that night. The Health Ministry said both were shot in the head and chest.
Activists and the opposition accuse the police of using excessive force against protesters, some of whom have attacked government facilities and policemen.
Saber said police were beating him and ordering him to stand up and that he was unable to because of a bird shot injury to his foot. He told the TV presenter he was scared to be arrested and thrown into the armored vehicle.
Saber then said that his family, including his children, threatened to shun him unless he told the truth about the police attack.
"After becoming a hero, I was being ridiculed online and on Facebook and being accused of not being a real Egyptian and of taking money."
"I tell everyone at the presidential palace and Tahrir (Square) that I am sorry."
He said the officials at the police hospital treated him well, and that he was not pressured to distort what happened. He said he initially gave incorrect testimony to try to avoid more problems.
Interior Minister Mohammed Ibrahim angered activists Saturday when he told reporters that initial results of the state prosecutor's investigation showed that police were absolved of direct abuse and that protesters were the ones who undressed Saber.
The march on the palace Friday evening, where President Mohammed Morsi
was not present, was part of a wave of demonstrations in cities around
the country called by opposition politicians, trying to wrest
concessions from Morsi after around 60 people were killed in protests,
clashes and riots over the past week.
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