Displaying 141 - 150 of 177.
The people in the West only know what they see with their own eyes: bombings, threats, kidnappings, slaughter, murder and intimidation of innocent civilians at the hands of groups acting in the name of Islam and holding a copy of the Qur’ān in one hand and a knife in the other.
It was not Tammām’s questions, but rather Najjār’s articles, that sparked controversy. The problem was with his unconventional opinions, not with the logical argument of al-Najjar’s opponents, who are attempting to expose what they believe to be his chicanery.
The author criticizes an attack on the Egyptian church by al-Qāhira newspaper.
The insatiable lust for attacking others and the attempts to belittle their opinions have become a disturbing shameful phenomenon that overwhelms sensational newspapers, a matter that runs counter to the press code of ethics. See for more media critique also: Art. 2 – caution needed with stories...
The "black press ring" is just trying to get readers entangled into their round-the-clock whining over a democracy of their own. Perhaps that is why they were exasperated by the scene of Egyptian citizens who did not announce their civil disobedience and went to cast their votes in the recent...
Journalists are not above the law. They should be subject to the jurisdiction of the code of conduct. Dr. Shawqī al-Sayyid views the journalists’ menace as an unacceptable catastrophe.
Private journals claiming their right to freedom of the press incite sedition due to the lack of responsibility. Media professors view this as an aggravation to society. These private journals have affected the public opinion badly and are affecting the freedom of press.
Some journals, partisan and independent, fuel events and distort the facts in a way that does not respect the margin of freedom they have been given. They call the victims of their anarchist demonstrations martyrs.
The article discusses three points: the biases and assumptions of the Western media and its thinking about the Arab world, the limits on political and press freedom in Egypt and the style of journalism this produces in Egypt and what the press can do to improve the image of Egypt.
Mosul is around 400 kilometers north of the Iraqi capital Baghdad. Sentiments of fear and wariness are shrouding Iraqi Christians during their moves inside the city of Ninwa and other Christian villages. Religious extremists that have already targeted women, merchants and businessmen are...

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