At least three people were killed in unrelated clashes between the security forces and residents, in Cairo and in a village in southern Egypt, witnesses and security officials said.

On Thursday night, President Mohammed Morsi met with his ministers at the presidential palace, the state news media reported. The makeup of the Cabinet, which includes longtime state employees and at least six former government ministers, has lowered expectations of a sweeping change in governance that was the promise of last year’s revolt.

In selecting technocrats, rather than high-profile appointees from across the political spectrum, Morsi and his prime minister, Hesham Kandil, showed a preference for cautious — and incremental — change as they face a series of mounting crises. They also made no moves to antagonize Egypt’s military, which holds most of the power in the country. The defense minister, Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, kept his post. 

Not for much longer.

One appointment, though, represented a bold stroke. In naming Ahmed Mekky, a longtime activist for judicial independence, as justice minister, Morsi and his prime minister seemed to be taking on Egypt’s most powerful judges, whose reputation for politicized decisions has emerged as one of the primary challenges to Morsi’s leadership.

Two of the 35 ministers are women, and only one is a Coptic Christian, state news media reported. Christians make up roughly 10 percent of the population. At least five ministers are directly affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood. Members of an ultraconservative Islamist faction known as Salafis boycotted the Cabinet after they were offered only one ministry, according to local news reports.

Kandil said he had paid no attention to party affiliation, sect, religion or gender in making his choices. ‘‘All I see is Egyptians,’’ he said.

On Thursday afternoon, as Egyptians debated the complexion of the new Cabinet, a deadly episode in central Cairo — wrapped in charges of corruption, class inequalities and complaints about police abuse — was a vivid reminder of the difficulties facing the new government.  

My printed paper played up the sectarian angle.

At least one man was killed and dozens of people were injured after a dispute about wages outside a luxury hotel led to clashes between riot police and the residents of a neighboring slum.

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A series of recent articles in the English-language weekly Egypt Independent detailed the struggles of the slum’s residents to keep their land, which is coveted by the state and local property developers.

At the same time, many young men in the area earn their living from the development, having struck a deal to provide security after protecting the towers during the January 2011 revolt.

According to witnesses, the clashes started after a young man, Amr el-Bunni, went to collect his payment. The witnesses said he argued with police officers, and one shot Bunni twice, killing him.

As riot police stormed the neighborhood, a vendor, Yahya Abdul-Halim, watched and asked, ‘‘Is this the new interior minister’s first day?’’

Abdul-Halim, who was a friend of Bunni, shooed away several police officers who tried to buy tea from his stand. ‘‘We want to be treated as human beings,’’ he said.

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