Displaying 1 - 10 of 10.
Egyptian churches rejected insistence by salafī members of the constituent assembly drafting a news constitution for Egypt that Copts should be compelled to pay the zakāh.  
In a statement released to Veto, a dissident member of the Muslim Brotherhood, Rabī` Shalabi, said that the Islamist Dā`esh Organization known as IS (Islamic State) plans terror attacks on the Egyptian churches similar to the latest attacks on the French capital, Paris, according to Shalabi. 
Shaykh 'Alā' Abū al-'Azāyim, the head of the Sufi 'Azmīyah Order, said his group has never supported Mubārak or his regime as some rumor, adding the Sufis are never silent over rulers' injustice because Sufis are not parasites in the society. "The Supreme Council for Sufi Orders is fighting whoever...
Sa‘d al-Dīn Ibrāhīm is one of the Egyptian regime’s harshest critics, in this article ‘Isām Hādī claims that Ibrāhīm is trying to put pressure on the U.S government to withhold aid to Egypt.
‘Isām Hādī reports about different opinions regarding Sa‘d al-Dīn Ibrāhīm.
In the article, a parliamentary member has launched an inquiry into the Prime ministry for not curbing what he described as chaos of Fatwás on satellite channels as well as in state religious institutions.
A draft law to combat rumors in Egypt is currently under study by the People’s Assembly. The Journalists’ Syndicate announced its strong opposition to the draft law, describing it as a threat to freedom of opinion and expression.
The article praises a court ruling repealing a previous ruling that gave Egypt’s nearly 1000 Bahā’īs the right to have their faith registered in official documents, with opinions by intellectuals that Bahā’ism is not a religion and that the only religions recognized in Egypt are the divine...
Racist acts against Muslims and Arabs living in Britain have risen since the July 7 terrorist attacks on London. Official sources have since reported more than 270 incidents of violence and discrimination against Muslims and Arabs across Britain.
The government tried to control the situation in Al-Kosheh by sending security forces, local and public leaders and Christian and Muslim religious men. In spite of the procedures that were taken by the government to overcome this crisis, including changing the name of the village from Al-Kosheh to...
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