BBC News with John Jason.
Supporters and opponents of Egypt's deposed President Mohammed Morsi have been holding mass protests in the capital Cairo. In Tahrir Square, tens of thousands of people expressed their backing for the military decision to remove Mr. Morsi from office. Elsewhere in Nasr City area, pro-Morsi demonstrators gathered outside a mosque demanded his reinstatement. Our correspondent Wyre Davies has been to Nasr City.
There were tens of thousands of Muslim Brotherhood supporters, men and women, defiant, determined and good humour, I mean, we haven't seen the violence thankfully that we saw on Friday, not yet, anyway. But they were equally determined, they won't go to give ground, they don't even count in this idea that there should be an interim government because of as far as they’re concerned, as far as the tens of thousands of people who voted for the Brotherhood last year who were concerned, Mohammed Morsi is the legitimately elected president of Egypt and there should be no talk of an interim government or any replacement for him.
A Jordanian court has charged the radical Muslim cleric Abu Qatada with two terrorism related offenses following his deportation from Britain. Yolande Knell is in Amman.
Soon after he arrived back in the Jordanian capital, Abu Qatada was escorted to the State Security Court by an armed police convoy. Legal proceedings lasted for several hours as he was questioned and formally charged with terrorist offenses, they related two cases dating back to 1998 and 1999. A lawyer for the cleric said he pleaded his innocence. However, the court ordered his detention for at least 15 days for further interrogation.