Displaying 1 - 5 of 5.
Civil society proved after a quarter of a century of struggle that it has the capability to break the barriers set by the regime between it and the people through the suppression of freedom of expression and the use of power and unconstitutional legislation to trample its activists.
This article criticizes the Egyptian government for refusing to recognize the fact that there are minorities in Egypt.
The author suggests that foreign intervention in support of human rights is legitimate by virtue of regional and international agreements provided that the state’s sovereignty is respected and national interests are preserved.
In this article, the author tackles the approaches adopted by the most important Coptic movement in history, as he describes it. ‘Abd al-‘Azīz, a New-York-resident human rights activist, breaks down the Coptic movement’s approaches into rights and political and religious directions.
Some consider that the Christians’ problems are imaginary and imply ingratitude on the part of those who live outside Egypt. It is just the same ugly face expressive of deep scorn to non-Muslim Egyptians and their legitimate unquestionable rights of full-fledged citizenship.
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