Displaying 91 - 100 of 205.
The General Prosecutor made an indictment order in the case of the Ibn Khaldūn center, and decided to refer Dr. Saʿd al-Dīn Ibrāhīm, the head of the center, and 27 other people, to the High State Security Court. They were charged with receiving 261,000 Euros as a donation from the European Union...
The article reports on public opinion and official stand points on the European constitution and Turkey’s membership in the EU
Al-Akhbār mentioned that the search of the Ibn Khaldūn Center, lead to the discovery of evidence to show that Dr. Saʿd al-Dīn Ibrāhīm has had correspondence with foreign organisations and had received quantities of money in a variety of currencies. According to al- Wafd, the prosecution heard...
The First Attorney General of the High State Security Investigation Bureau, decided to renew the custody of Dr. Saʿd al-Dīn Ibrāhīm, Head of the Ibn Khaldoun [Ibn Khaldūn] Center and treasurer of the Women-Voters Support Agency and Nādya ʿAbd al-Nūr, the Center’s financial manager.
Investigations into the activities of Dr. Saad Eddin Ibrahim, Director of the Ibn Khaldoun Center for Social Research, revealed new developments in the case. What the investigations and inquiries revealed is recounted in this article.
This article gives an overall view, based on different newspapers, of the case of the Ibn Khaldūn Center. Al-Ahrām wrote about the investigations of those who are involved with Dr. Saʿd al-Dīn Ibrāhīm. The press review ends with the comment of al-Ahālī and al-' 'Usbūʿ on the Americans' interference...
This article exposes the reasons for arresting Saad Eddin Ibrahim, Professor of sociology in the American University in Cairo and director of the Ibn Khaldoun Center for Developmental Studies, and the full details of his project. Some of the charges of which he was accused are implication in...
To have a fruitful cooperation, it is important that the West, and especially the U.S. government, move away from its stereotypical belief that all Islamic groups are terrorist organizations. Dialogue between civilizations marked the starting point of the Mediterranean partnership.
The author uses two images, that of the ostrich and the owl, to explore possible immigration scenarios in Europe. She argues that only “a vision steeped in individual rights, the rule of law and the equality of men and women can help guide Europe out of [its current immigration quagmire].”
The author deals with the issue of dialogue among civilizations and suggestions to strengthen interfaith coexistence, stressing that all parties to a dialogue have to reject generalized judgments, which, he said, pose the gravest threat to this process.

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