Morsi supporters went to a government compound to protest at the appointment of army officers as local governors.
Local residents then clashed with the pro-Morsi crowds and
both sides threw bottles and stones at each other, before security
forces moved in.
The army deposed Mr Morsi in July and put in place an interim government.
Supporters of Mr Morsi, an Islamist leader who came from the
Muslim Brotherhood movement, refuse to accept the new government and
insist he must be reinstated.
They say the military overthrew a democratically elected government and is now attempting to entrench its power.
Opponents of Mr Morsi say he used his year in
power to dismantle secular, democratic institutions in order to increase
the influence of Islam
Deepening divisions
Tuesday's trouble began when crowds of Mr Morsi's supporters
marched to an area of Cairo that houses several government buildings,
and is also home to many people who oppose the Muslim Brotherhood.
The protesters were angry because at least 15 former military officers have been sworn in as local governors.
The demonstrators tried to get into a government compound, but were forced out and then clashed with local residents and police.
Women and children fled the scene, as both sides threw bottles and stones at each other.
Witnesses said residents pelted the demonstrators from balconies, taunting them by calling them terrorists.
Millions of Egyptians had protested in favour of Mr Morsi's
removal, but correspondents say his ousting appears to be deepening the
divisions in Egyptian society.
His supporters have set up two camps in central Cairo, where they have been holding sit-ins.
The authorities threatened to remove the camps earlier this week, but then said they would delay the plan.
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