At least 650 people were detained in demonstrations against Egypt's coup d'état Sisi on Friday.
After the bloody coup he made in collaboration with the West against martyr President Mohammed Morsi and the Ikhwan administration, Sisi, whose seat he occupied, was shaken.
The number of people detained in protests against coup d'état General Abdulfettah es-Sisi in various regions of Egypt has increased to 650 since Friday.
Three days ago, the anti-Sisi protests in Egypt's capital Cairo spread across the country.
The demonstrators shouted slogans against the regime and called for the coup d'état Sisi to resign.
Police intervened with tear gas and detained dozens of demonstrators. The demonstrations in Egypt began after the Egyptian businessman Muhammad Ali, who lives in Spain, called the public on social media to protest Sisi.
Mohammed Ali, an Egyptian businessman accusing Sisi of corruption in the coup, shared videos of Sisi in luxury, accusing the president of spending money for the misery.
On September 15, the Egyptians gathered on social media under the label 'Enough Sisi', saying "We will return to the squares".
Security Prosecutor's Office, began to question the detainees transferred to the statement, among the detained students, journalists, activists and lawyer Mahinur al-Masri were recorded.