Cairo, Egypt (CNN) -- Egypt's top prosecutor opened
an investigation Thursday into claims that Mohamed Morsy and top leaders
of the Muslim Brotherhood incited violence and the killing of
protesters, a day after the military ousted the country's first
democratically elected president.
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The prosecutor, Gen.
Abdel Maquid Mahmoud, issued an order preventing Morsy and 35 others
from leaving the country while they are under investigation, state-run
Middle East News Agency and EgyNews reported.
The news came as the
Muslim Brotherhood and others called for Morsy supporters to take to the
streets Friday across Egypt to protest the military's actions, while
Egypt's armed forces announced it would guarantee the rights of people
to protest as long it did not result in violence or destruction of
property.
Even so, the military
moved to arrest leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood who supported Morsy's
rule and to silence their communications outlets.
Muslim Brotherhood
spokesman Gehad El-Haddad told CNN that Morsy was initially under house
arrest at the presidential Republican Guard headquarters in Cairo and
later moved to the Ministry of Defense; the military has not commented
on Morsy's whereabouts.
The news from MENA and
EgyNews appear to contradict reports that Morsy refused an offer by the
armed forces to leave Egypt for Qatar, Turkey or Yemen. The state-run
newspaper Al-Ahram reported Thursday that Morsy would not step down
voluntarily and that his speech Wednesday -- shortly before his ouster
-- represented a "flagrant challenge to (the military's) authority" and a
"declaration of confrontation with it."
A spokesman for Morsy's
Freedom and Justice Party said that what started as a military coup was
"turning into something much more."
In an interview in Cairo,
El-Haddad cited the arrests as "very, very questionable attempts by the
military to dismantle the Brotherhood."
Though El-Haddad has had
no direct communications with Morsy, sympathizers within the military
were giving information to the Brotherhood, he said.
The former head of the
Muslim Brotherhood, Mohamed Mahdi Akef, and his bodyguards were arrested
Thursday in Cairo with four weapons in their possession, according to
MENA, which cited security sources.
Also arrested was the Muslim Brotherhood's current leader Mohamed Badei, Egyptian state broadcaster Nile TV reported Thursday.
Badei was arrested for "incitement to murder," according to the arrest report cited by Al-Ahram.
Police are seeking another 300 members of the Muslim Brotherhood, Al-Ahram reported.
On Wednesday, police
closed the studios of pro-Muslim Brotherhood television stations Misr
25, The People and al-Hafez and arrested some of the journalists,
according to Al-Ahram.
Sporadic violence
The Egyptian military
also called Thursday for calm and unity, saying Egyptian values "do not
allow for gloating or revenge between different groups" or for the
destruction of private and public property, according to a statement
posted on the Facebook page of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces.
Even so, sporadic
violence at times pitted Morsy's supporters against the opposition and
the military, raising fears of spiraling unrest.
More than 100 people
were wounded and at least two people, believed to be children, were
killed in clashes across the country on Thursday, according to state
media.
Violence was reported at
a pro-Morsy rally Thursday in the northern city of Zagazig, Nile TV
reported, citing security officials.
An Egyptian soldier was
killed and two were wounded when rockets were fired at a police station
in Rafah, on the border between Egypt and Gaza, news agencies, including
Reuters and AFP, reported early Friday.
Rocket-propelled
grenades were also fired at army checkpoints near the El Arish
International Airport in the Sinai, near the border with Gaza, the
agencies reported.
It was not immediately known if the attacks were connected to the overthrow of Morsy.
On its website, the
Muslim Brotherhood declared "our unequivocal rejection of the military
coup against the elected president and the will of the nation and refuse
to participate in any action with the authority that stole the power
and dealt violently with peaceful demonstrators."
It added, "Mohamed
Morsy, president of Egypt, stresses that the measures that were
announced by the General Command of the Armed Forces represent a
full-fledged military coup which is unacceptable by every free person."
It called on demonstrators to show restraint.
The moves against the
organization came as an uncertain new political order began to take
shape with the swearing in of an interim president as well as the
constitution's suspension on Wednesday.
State-run Al-Ahram News
reported that Egypt's stock market surged 7% in the first hours of
trading Thursday to a near two-month high.
Coup divides Egypt
The coup divided the
millions of people who had taken to the streets across Egypt in recent
days to defend or criticize Morsy's government.
It also raised questions
about what will happen to Morsy and his supporters, who insist he
remains the country's legitimate leader; whether violence blamed for the
deaths Wednesday of at least 32 people will spread; whether democracy
has a chance in Egypt.
But the Tamarod movement
that had sought Morsy's ouster was moving on. It said in a tweet that
it had nominated Mohamed ElBaradei, an opposition leader, to become
prime minister.
ElBaradei told CNN on Thursday that Morsy's ouster was not a coup but was instead a "correction of the uprising of 2011."
Another opposition
figure, Egyptian Conference Party leader Amre Moussa, took a similar
semantic stance. "This is not a coup; this is a revolution," the former
presidential candidate told CNN's Jim Clancy.
Asked whether the
Brotherhood arrests were necessary, he said they would be temporary.
"There are certain security measures that should not stay but for the
first couple of days, three, four days -- the new regime wants to ensure
that discipline will take place."
Democratic processes had
been "absent" under Morsy, said the former Arab League
secretary-general, who lost last year in his bid for the presidency.
Asked whether he would
run again, he said, "I have declared several times before that I do not
intend to run for president next time. This is my determination as I am
talking to you."
The conflicting views,
the threat of more violence, possible divisions among the anti-Morsy
coalition and Egypt's economic woes represent major obstacles to a
smooth transition, said Hani Sabra,
director of the Middle Eastern arm of the Eurasia Group, a U.S.-based
political risk research and consulting firm. "I don't think that the
military's so-called road map is actually going to move smoothly. I
think there are a lot of challenges it faces."
The huge crowds that had
celebrated Morsy's ouster Wednesday night with horns, cheering,
fireworks had thinned hours later. On Thursday, the atmosphere in
Cairo's Tahrir Square was calm and celebratory. Crowds cheered as
military helicopters flew overhead. Women pushed baby strollers,
children had their faces painted, music played and people danced.
Swearing in
Morsy, a
Western-educated Islamist elected a year ago, "did not achieve the goals
of the people" and failed to meet the generals' demands that he share
power with his opposition, Egypt's top military officer, Gen.
Abdel-Fatah El-Sisi, said Wednesday in a televised speech to the nation.
Adly Mansour, head of the country's Supreme Constitutional Court, was sworn in Thursday as interim president in Cairo.
At the ceremony, Mansour
said the Egyptian people had given him the authority "to amend and
correct" the revolution that toppled Hosni Mubarak in 2011.
Until new elections, to
be held at an unspecified date, Mansour will have the power to issue
constitutional declarations, El-Sisi said.
The Egyptian military
has dominated the country for six decades and took direct power for a
year and a half after Mubarak's ouster.
Morsy's approval ratings
plummeted after his election in June 2012 as his government failed to
keep order or revive Egypt's economy.
Morsy's opponents
accused him of authoritarianism and forcing through a conservative
agenda, and on Monday the military gave him 48 hours to order reforms.
As the deadline neared
Wednesday, he offered to form an interim coalition government to oversee
parliamentary elections and revise the constitution, which was enacted
in January. But those actions failed to satisfy the generals.
Conflicting responses
The army's move against
Morsy and the Muslim Brotherhood, the long-repressed political movement
that propelled him to office, provoked wildly conflicting reactions.
In Tahrir Square, the
epicenter of two Egyptian upheavals, a vast gathering of Morsy's
opponents erupted in jubilation and fireworks at El-Sisi's announcement
Wednesday night.
"The crowd walked up to the barricades and started banging on them using rocks, sticks and even bare hands," said Sultan Zaki Al-Saud in a CNN iReport. "It sounded like thunder as the hollow barricades rang with every blow."
During his time in office, Morsy had squared off against Egypt's judiciary, the media, the police and even artists.
Egyptians are frustrated
with rampant crime and a struggling economy. Unemployment remains high,
food prices are rising and there are frequently electricity cuts and
long fuel lines.
'The world is looking'
Morsy had remained defiant.
"The world is looking at
us today," he said Wednesday in a taped statement delivered to the
Arabic satellite network Al Jazeera. "We by ourselves can bypass the
obstacles. We, the sons of Egypt, the sons of this country -- this is
the will of the people and cannot be canceled."
Shortly after Morsy's
statement aired, Al Jazeera reported its Cairo studios had been raided
during a live broadcast and 28 staff members arrested. Most were later
released, it said.
On Thursday, Al
Jazeera's acting chief, Mostefa Souag, demanded the immediate release of
the Egyptian channel's managing director, Ayman Gaballah, and Al
Jazeera Arabic broadcast engineer Ahmad Hasan.
"A return to Mubarak-era
practices of mass arrests and politically motivated imprisonment of
Muslim Brotherhood leaders will have the worst possible effect on
Egypt's political future," said Human Rights Watch, the U.S.-based advocacy group.
Concerns of a backlash
Some observers warned of an extremist backlash.
"The major lesson that
Islamists in the Middle East are likely to learn from this episode is
that they will not be allowed to exercise power, no matter how many
compromises they make in both the domestic and foreign policy arenas,"
said Mohammed Ayoob, Michigan State University professor emeritus of
international relations.
"This is likely to push a
substantial portion of mainstream Islamists into the arms of the
extremists who reject democracy and ideological compromise," Ayoob wrote in a CNN.com opinion piece.
President Barack Obama said the United States was "deeply concerned" by Morsy's removal and the suspension of the constitution.
He called upon the
military to hand over power to "a democratically elected civilian
government" but did not say it needed to be Morsy's.
At least three
high-level conversations took place between U.S. military officials and
their Egyptian counterparts in the past week, Pentagon officials said
Thursday.
The president's national
security team that has been in touch with Egyptian officials and
regional allies urged a "quick and responsible" return to a
democratically elected government, the White House said Thursday.
Washington has supplied
Egypt's military with tens of billions of dollars in support and
equipment for more than 30 years. Under U.S. law, that support could be
cut off after a coup.
Obama said he had ordered "the relevant departments and agencies" to study how the change in power would affect U.S. aid.
The German government was more blunt in its assessment.
"This is a heavy setback
for democracy in Egypt," German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle
said. "It is very urgent for Egypt to return to constitutional order as
soon as possible."
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