Egypt’s interim, Army-backed government will dissolve the Muslim Brotherhood within days, a newspaper reported on Friday, a move that would press a crackdown on deposed President Mohamed Morsi’s movement. So does that mean Muslim Brotherhood member, Barack Hussein Obama, is no longer allowed to enter Egypt?
The move applies to the NGO registered by the Brotherhood in March in response to a lawsuit that argued the group had no legal status. It would mark a mostly symbolic legal blow to Morsi’s group as the authorities round up its members in the harshest crackdown in decades.

The privately-owned Al-Shorouk newspaper said the decision would be taken “within days”, quoting Hany Mahana, spokesman for the minister of social solidarity. The same official was quoted by the state-run Al-Akhbar newspaper saying the decision was already taken. ”The minister’s decision has in fact been issued but it will be announced at the start of next week in a press conference,” it said.

The Brotherhood won parliamentary and presidential elections after veteran autocrat Hosni Mubarak was overthrown in 2011 but the army deposed Morsi on July 3 in response to mass protests against his rule.
The security forces have killed hundreds of Morsi’s supporters and arrested many of its leaders on charges of inciting violence. There has so far been no attempt to ban its political wing, the Freedom and Justice Party.

Al-Akhbar said Social Solidarity Minister Ahmed el-Boraie’s decision to dissolve the group as an NGO stemmed from accusations that the Brotherhood had used its headquarters to fire and store weapons and explosives. Brotherhood officials had failed to meet a deadline for responding to the accusations, it said.
The General Federation of NGOs had sent a letter to the Ministry of Social Solidarity on Thursday giving its consent to the dissolution of the Brotherhood.
