Displaying 901 - 910 of 2331.
News is almost never as it appears.  On December 1st I went with investigative researcher and former lieutenant with the Egyptian coastal security Intelligence Rā’id al-Sharqāwī to Tahrīr square.  The square is currently blocked for traffic by perhaps 2,000 demonstrators asking people wanting to...
Lex Runderkamp, the journalist responsible for the “news report” of NOS-TV on the tensions surrounding a church under construction in Mārīnāb, responded to the commentary about his film in Arab-West Report in a text I promptly translated for Arab-West Report and gave to Lamīs Yahyá, author of our...
Results of the first round of Egypt's first post-Mubārak parliamentary elections, as announced by the High Judicial Elections Commission (HJEC) showed progress by the Democratic Alliance for Egypt, in which the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) obtained 40% of the votes, followed...
Following the NOS reporting and responses I asked Lamis Yehya, who had joined me in the visit to Mārīnāb to come to our office in Cairo.  
Veteran journalist Lex Runderkamp visited Egypt to report about what happened on September 30th in Mārīnāb. He reported for Dutch TV, in prime time, on November 26th [Title: “Conflict between Copts and Muslims is complicated”].
I’ve never thought for a single moment on January 28, 2011, known as the Friday of Anger, while I was marching with hundreds of thousands others screaming at the top of our lungs “Down with Mubārak!” that I was only paving the way for Islamists to make it to the corridors of power.  
As an American Christian in Egypt I find that I instinctively view events here through the following lens: Liberals are the good guys, Islamists are the bad guys, and the army is somewhere in between, perhaps neutral, perhaps not. Complicated times beg for simplistic narratives, and this one...
On September 28, 2011 the Center for Intercultural Dialogue and Translation (CIDT) hosted three roundtable discussions concerning the second article of the former Egyptian constitution. Following the revolution the status of Article Two has been a subject of great debate, as it serves to great...
On September 28, 2011 the Center for Intercultural Dialogue and Translation (CIDT) hosted three roundtable discussions concerning the second article of the former Egyptian constitution. Following the revolution the status of Article Two has been a subject of great debate, as it serves to great...
On September 28, 2011 the Center for Intercultural Dialogue and Translation (CIDT) hosted three roundtable discussions concerning the second article of the former Egyptian constitution. Following the revolution the status of Article Two has been a subject of great debate, as it serves to great...

Pages

Subscribe to