CAIRO, Aug 17 (Reuters) – Egypt’s prime minister has proposed disbanding the Muslim Brotherhood of ousted President Mohamed Mursi, the government said today, raising the stakes in a bloody struggle between the state and Islamists for control of the country. Live television showed a gunman firing at soldiers and police from the minaret of a [...]

Sunday Times 2

Egypt considers Brotherhood ban, gunfire exchanged in mosque

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CAIRO, Aug 17 (Reuters) – Egypt’s prime minister has proposed disbanding the Muslim Brotherhood of ousted President Mohamed Mursi, the government said today, raising the stakes in a bloody struggle between the state and Islamists for control of the country.
Live television showed a gunman firing at soldiers and police from the minaret of a central Cairo mosque, with security forces shooting back at the building where Mursi followers had taken shelter. Reuters witnesses said Mursi supporters also exchanged gunfire with security forces inside the mosque. The interior ministry said 173 people died in clashes across

Supporters of the interim government installed by the army cheer Egypt's army chief General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi (pictured in poster) (REUTERS)

Egypt on Friday, bringing the death toll from three days of carnage to almost 800. Among those killed was a son of Muslim Brotherhood leader Mohamed Badie, shot dead during a protest in Cairo’s huge Ramses Square where about 95 people died in an afternoon of gunfire and mayhem on Friday.

Egyptian authorities said they had rounded up more than 1,000 Islamists and surrounded Ramses Square following Friday’s “Day of Rage” called by the Brotherhood to denounce a lethal crackdown on its followers on Wednesday. Witnesses said tear gas was fired into the mosque prayer room to try to flush everyone out and gunshots were heard.

With anger rising on all sides, and no sign of a compromise in sight, Prime Minister Hazem el-Beblawi proposed the legal dissolution of the Brotherhood – a move that would force the group underground and could lead to a broad crackdown.  “It is being studied currently,” said government spokesman Sherif Shawky.

The Brotherhood was officially dissolved by Egypt’s military rulers in 1954, but registered itself as a non-governmental organisation in March in a response to a court case brought by opponents of the group who were contesting its legality.




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