A protester washes his eyes with milk to alleviate effects of tear gas during clashes with security forces near the Interior Ministry in Cairo, Sunday. — Reuters CAIRO — Protesters demanding a swift presidential election and an early handover of power by the army hurled rocks at police guarding the Egyptian interior ministry Sunday and were forced back with volleys of tear gas. It was the fourth day of clashes outside the ministry, in which seven people have died. Protesters accuse the ministry of failing to prevent the deaths last week of 74 people after a soccer match in the Mediterranean city of Port Said. Five more have died in Suez. Some protesters believe that remnants of the government of ousted president Hosni Mubarak were behind violence that caused a stampede at the soccer match last Wednesday, and see it as part of a plot to create chaos to reassert their influence. Political figures and a civilian advisory body to the military have suggested bringing forward a presidential vote to April or May, from the June date foreseen in the transition timetable of the army, which took power after Mubarak quit. Police and protesters, some waving flags of Al Ahli soccer team which played in Wednesday's match, hurled rocks at each other and police fired volleys of tear gas to push the lines of mostly young protesters back from the ministry building. The authorities erected fresh barriers of big concrete blocks barring access through streets leading to the ministry. Some earlier barriers had been hauled down. “The demand is that the army step down politically and announce the start of nominations for the presidential election immediately,” said Waleed Saleh, 30, an activist with a face mask at the ready, speaking near the ministry. The military council, which took charge when Hosni Mubarak was toppled by a popular uprising on Feb. 11, has promised to hand power to civilians by the end of June after an election. But calls for a swifter handover have mounted, and the Muslim Brotherhood which has the biggest bloc in parliament, added its voice on Saturday to calls for a faster transition. An army-appointed civilian council set up to advise the military is proposing accepting nominations for the presidency from Feb. 23, nearly two months sooner than the April 15 date previously announced. This could lead to a vote in April or May. “If the army adopts that proposal, it will reduce the level of tension,” said Saleh, who is also a member of the Lawyer's Syndicate, though he voiced a view popular among activists that the army might still try to influence policy from behind the scenes even with a president in place. Saleh is among hardened activists who have kept a permanent presence in Tahrir Square since Jan. 25, the anniversary of the eruption of protests against Mubarak. Other protesters also called for the army to quit now and demanded retribution after the soccer deaths and for those killed in protests.