Displaying 2511 - 2520 of 3269.
The Muslim Brotherhood members expand their presence in sports clubs and run for the elections in governorate clubs.
In this article, Rihāb al-Shāzlī publishes the comments of a number of political and civil society activists on their dialogue with the US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice during her last visit to Egypt. Their statements focused on government corruption and reform in Egypt, as well as political...
Adler addresses the election victory of Hamās, and also the prevalence of Islamic movements across the Middle East. He notes that their prime goals are political, rather than religious, and that they have had a major impact on the status quo of Middle Eastern geopolitics.
Mustafa Bayyoumī criticizes al-Dustour newspaper and its editor-in-chief Ibrāhīm ‘Īsa for what he calls "attempts to irresponsibly incite the masses by seizing any occasion, good or bad, to stir sentiments against the government", describing al-Dustour as a "school of journalistic adolescence."
In an exclusive statement to al-Dustour, the general guide of the Muslim Brotherhood has announced that "the group sees no problem with building churches." Member of the Irshād [guidance] Office, Dr. Mahmoud ‘Izzat has argued that "People of the Book" are entitled to have their own houses of...
Despite public fears over the unprecedented success of the Muslim Brotherhood in the recent parliamentary elections, member of the Egyptian Writers’ Union (EWU), Dr. Hishām Qāsim, believes that the Egyptian government should reach out to the religious group to involve it in the process of fighting...
The authors said that the British Foreign Office has declined to comment on a leaked report about alleged contacts between British officials and Egyptian members of parliament belonging to the Muslim Brotherhood. The Brotherhood has denied these allegations.
The author comments on the changed vocabulary of the Muslim Brotherhood, which has recently used the word "empowerment" instead of "participation."
‘Imād Taha discusses the birth of the Wasat Party, a breakaway from the Muslim Brotherhood, and questions the Islamist group’s support for plurality.
The author is interviewing a former prominent member and spokesman of the Muslim Brotherhood’s international organization, who said that the group’s agenda is based on reality and new issues in the political arena.

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