CAIRO: Egypt's Minister of Finance and Deputy Prime Minister Hazem el-Beblawi resigned on Tuesday in protest over the military's actions on Sunday that left at least 25 people dead and hundreds more injured when the military opened fire on peaceful protesters in central Cairo. According to state television, the Beblawi did not give specific reasons for his resignation. However, one aide, speaking to The Associate Press on condition of anonymity said that his quitting the cabinet was a direct result of the military violence against protesters on Sunday. The aide said Beblawi had expressed exasperation with the government's inability to deal with the protests in an adequate manner and effectively told the prime minister in his resignation letter that he “can't work like this.” Military police used force to disperse a Coptic Christian march that started from the district of Shubra and arrived early Sunday evening at Maspero, the National Radio and Television building. The military fired upon protesters, and ran them over with military vehicles. Thousands of Copts had gathered for the evening to protest the burning of a church in Edfu, Aswan on September 30. Egyptian Prime Minister Essam Sharaf gave an address to the nation early Monday morning, calling the clashes, “a conspiracy to bring down the state and not sectarian violence.” Some families of the deceased demanded autopsies for the bodies of their sons and daughters to determine the cause of their deaths. In the coronary report of one victim, the cause of death was reported as “fights between citizens.” Things on Sunday intensified after the military issued a statement on national TV, urging citizens to take to the street and “help protect the army against Coptic attacks.” Eyewitness told Bikyamasr.com that the call drove armed men from their houses to protect the army, believing that Copts were attacking the military and attempting to kill officers. This later turned out to be entirely false. One injured man at the scene told Bikyamasr.com that rumors about Copts burning copies of the Qur'an spread in the Cairo neighborhood Bolaq, near downtown. In response to the rumors, men took arms and “went out to defend Islam,” the injured man said. He asked not to be identified. He had a broken arm, and his head was injured and bleeding, yet he refused to go to the hospital for fear of getting arrested. He added that he and friends saw a corpse of man lying under the bridge near downtown and wanted to move it, but were stopped and assaulted by residents armed with bats and guns. Eyewitnesses by Maspero said that residents from neighboring areas came in to aid the military, and burned several cars near the building. The army, however, claims that Coptic protesters were the ones responsible for vandalized public property and attacks against soldiers, a notion that Copts and eyewitnesses strongly deny. “We were not armed and not at any point did any of us hold a gun. This was a peaceful protest that suddenly turned bloody after the military attacked us,” Mina, a protester who fled the violence in Maspero and took refuge in Tahrir, told Bikyamasr.com. “They were killing us even after we shouted “silmya, silmya” or “peaceful, peaceful,” he added. ** Manar Ammar contributed to this report. BM