After an emergency meeting in the early hours of today morning, the group called for the "open-ended" sit-in to run through a Wednesday general assembly meeting and World Press Freedom day on May 3.
Later this morning, dozens gathered at the steps of the building, chanting "journalists are not terrorists." They plan for a larger demonstration this afternoon.
The syndicate described the police's entry into the building as a "raid by security forces whose blatant barbarism and aggression on the dignity of the press and journalists and their syndicate has surprised the journalistic community and the Egyptian people."
Police denied they entered the building by force and said only eight officers were involved, who they said were acting on an arrest warrant for the two journalists accused of organizing protests to destabilize the country.
Unauthorised demonstrations in Egypt are banned, and demonstrators subject to arrest.
"The Ministry of Interior affirms that it did not raid the syndicate or use any kind of force in arresting the two, who turned themselves in as soon as they were told of the arrest warrant," the ministry said in a statement.
It was unclear what size any sit-in at the syndicate could achieve. Police, backed by army troops, today had initially barricaded the entire area and prevented people from approaching the building, but they eventually lifted the blockade. Still hundreds of uniformed and undercover police were deployed across central Cairo in order to prevent any protests.
A day earlier, police prevented hundreds of workers from holding a meeting at the building to commemorate International Workers' Day, prompting independent trade union leaders to urge the government to allow them freedom of assembly.
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