Displaying 301 - 310 of 623.
British police staff receives training at an Islamic school while 14 people are arrested for terrorist recruitment and training.
Two participants in the earlier Bali bombings received jail sentences from Indonesian courts.
The author interviewed Rafīq al-‘Ajamī, one of the Arab Afghans who was imprisoned for four years on charges of carrying out the explosion of the Egyptian Embassy in Pakistan in 1996.
‘Isām Dirbālah, a key figure of the Jamā‘ah Islāmīyah, in this interview with al- Ahrām newspaper from prison through his lawyer, says that the Jamā‘ah Islāmīyah, which is getting ready to resume its da‘wa and social activities, is no longer in confrontation with the state and is strongly committed...
In a statement published yesterday on al-Jamā‘ah al- Islāmīyah’s website, the group denied any links to al-Qā‘idah¸ indicating that Dr. Ayman al-Zawāhirī’s recent videotaped message about the alleged union between some members of the group and al-Qā‘idah "contradicts reality."
This article analyses a recent article published in the International Herald Tribune and examines how terms such as Islamists, fundamentalism, and extremism are used ambiguously by the author. It notes the importance of explaining such terminology so that misunderstandings are avoided.
‘Abd Allāh, the son of Shaykh ‘Umar ‘Abd al-Rahmān, the former leader of the banned al-Jamā‘a al- Islāmīya who is currently serving a life sentence in the United States for his role in planning the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center in New York, has denied any knowledge of the death of his...
Sources within the "banned" Jihād group have recently revealed that the group is currently considering a non-violence initiative, in response to repeated calls from former leaders of the group to reject violence, Ahmad Imbābī writes. Unlike al-Jamā‘ah al -Islāmīya, the Jihād group has no "...
In an attempt to promote its recent non-violent approach, al -Jamā‘ah al- Islāmīyah has launched a website, which the author says marks a considerable change in the ideological stance of the "banned" Islamic group.
Rose al-Yousuf publishes a letter sent in by member of the Bar Association, lawyer Muntasir al-Zayyāt, commenting on a news item published by the newspaper on June 26, 2006, which linked al-Zayyāt’s participation in the Zamālik Sporting Club coming elections to al- Jamā‘a al-Islāmīya.

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