TEMPO.CO, Kairo - Egypt's Attorney General Office (AGO) has started an investigation on Mohamed Morsi. The AGO claimed that Muhammad Mursi and the Ikhwanul Muslimin's (Moslem Brotherhood) top leaders have incited violence and the killing of protesters a day after the military ousted the country's first democratically elected president.
The prosecutor, Gen. Abdel Maquid Mahmoud, issued an order to prevent Morsi and 35 others from leaving the country while they are under investigation, as cited by the Middle East News Agency and EgyNews.
At the same time, the Muslim Brotherhood called for Morsi's supporters to went on the streets on Friday, July 5, to protest the military's actions. On the other hand, the armed forces announced that they would guarantee the rights of people to protest as long it did not resulted in violence or destruction of property.
Gehad El-Haddad, Muslim Brotherhood spokesman, told CNN that Morsi was initially under house arrest at the presidential Republican Guard headquarters in Cairo. He was then moved to the Ministry of Defense, in which the military has no comment on Morsi's whereabouts.