Date of source: Wednesday, October 25, 2006
Saint Pākhūm’s church in Qina
is under threat.
Date of source: Saturday, September 30, 2006 to Sunday, October 1, 2006
Mustafa
Bayyūmī analyses the images of God’s prophets used in the novels of Najīb Mahfūz.
Date of source: Monday, August 21, 2006
Nearly 100 Copts from one
extended family were displaced from
their homes in the Upper Egyptian village of Hijāzah, Qinā
governorate, after a fight with a
neighboring Muslim family, Shīrīn Rabī‘ says.
Date of source: Monday, August 7, 2006
The author reports that for the first time in Egypt a Christian cleric is facing Qur’ān accusation that
could send him to prison. The matter involved a dispute between two businessmen which Bishop Kyrillos intervened
in. However he is now facing accusations of breach of trust over the matter.
Date of source: Monday, August 7, 2006
Families of eight Christian girls, who disappeared suddenly, talked to Sawt al-Umah, saying that their daughters might have converted to Islām and married Muslims.
Date of source: Wednesday, July 12, 2006
The author reports on the latest incident of
arresting a citizen on allegations of breaking
into a church in Qena.
Date of source: Sunday, May 7, 2006
The
author spoke about Qinā governor Majdī Ayoub Iskandar, who
is the third Christian governor in the
history of Egypt, the reasons for his appointment and his view of Muslim-
Christian relations in Egypt.
Date of source: Monday, April 10, 2006
Sectarian sedition has ripped through al-Fāw village, al-Qinā governorate,
after news spread that Coptic villagers were on their way to reestablish the Virgin Mary Charity, affiliated
to the
Ministry of Social Solidarity.
Date of source: Wednesday, April 5, 2006
Two reportedly missing Coptic girls,
Mary As‘ad Jirjis and Marcelle Samou’īl Qiddīs of Naj‘ Hammādī
have been recently found at the house of Karīma al-Sayyid Muhammad who informed the police of the girls’
presence after reading about their disappearance in the newspapers.
Date of source: Saturday, October 13, 2001 to Friday, October 19, 2001
Bin Laden and his terrorist followers, who escaped from Egypt, imagined that Egypt could be a stage for their malicious operations. Their first target was to strike the symbols of the state, the cultured and the intellectuals, and to create a moral dread within Egyptians. Their second target was...