Opposition groups in Egypt will march Tuesday to the palace of President Mohammed Morsi to protest recent constitutional decrees and the proposed new constitution, dpa reported.
Seven liberal and left-wing political parties as well as revolutionary groups are organizing a series of marches to converge on the Ittihadiyeh Palace in the Cairo suburb of Heliopolis.
A spokeswoman for one of the participating parties told dpa that the demonstration would be "entirely peaceful".
"We place the entire responsibility for protecting the demonstrators on President Morsi and the Ministry of the Interior," Egyptian Social Democratic Party spokeswoman Amany el-Khayat said.
A statement from the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party said that opposition leaders including Mohammed ElBaradei and Hamdeen Sabahy would be responsible for any violence.
"Just as we took responsibility for our demonstrations and successfully organized them, they must take responsibility for the demonstrations that they call and bear the responsibility for any violence due to bad organization," said FJP spokesman Murad Ali.
The opposition groups object to a recent constitutional declaration in which Morsi made his decrees immune to judicial review, as well as to the draft constitution which he has ordered to be put to a referendum on December 15.
Meanwhile, 11 newspapers did not publish Tuesday in protest at what they say are restrictions on the freedom of the press in the draft constitution, which was agreed to by an Islamist-dominated assembly on Friday.