Displaying 61 - 70 of 149.
Last Thursday, 10th of August, the jailed professor of sociology and head of the Ibn Khaldoun center, Saad Eddin Ibrahim, was released on bail of 10,000 L.E (2,857 US dollars) following a decision made by the general attorney of the state security department, Hisham Saraya.
The frozen Labour party challenged the administrative procedures used to freeze it and presented a list of 19 candidates for the next parliamentary elections, while a group of law activists called for the resumption of the party’s activities.
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.
State Security Prosecution searched the offices of the so- called Organization for Support of Egyptian Women Voters, a project affiliated to the Ibn Khaldoun Center. Thousands of forged voting cards were found. Ibrahim accepted funds of $200,00 from the EU in support of the project, where the...
From his jail in the United States, Shaykh Omar Abdel Rahman, the spiritual leader of al- Gamaa’t al-Islāmīyah in Egypt, issued a controversial statement, in which he withdrew his support for their initiative to abandon violence. This initiative was originally launched in July 1997.
The authors discusses the problem of kidnapping incidents that have spread in Egyptian society in recent years.
The author reports on the spread of the phenomenon of violence in Egyptian society.
The article deals with the issue of imprisonment of journalists, namely Ibrāhīm ‘Īsā, the former editor-in-chief of the independent newspaper al-Dustūr, as the author suggests that the government is partially in favor of jailing independent and partisan journalists.
After Dr. Ahmad Kamāl Abū al-Majd’s proposition regarding amendments to the political constitutional, the Human Rights Council witnessed disagreements among its members. The following lines shed light on some of the Council members’ opinions.
Four different opinions from Muslims and Christians, concerning the campaign launched by the Egyptian Organization for Human Rights to have religion data omitted from identity cards.

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