Displaying 801 - 810 of 1162.
The author is reviewing the crisis of the opposition newspapers, which he argues are victims of the power struggle inside political parties.
Muna Bakr says Islamic groups that cheered at the victory of the Turkish Islamic Refah Party did not notice that party’s program is basically secular.
In this interview, Dr. Muhammad Farahāt argues that the way of thinking of the Islamic has witnessed many changes during the last twenty years.
Certain parties have managed to dominate the minds of some Europeans and bring them into a state of genuine panic about losing their national identity at the hands of what they called the Islamic cultural invasion. This has been one effective result of the boycott against Denmark following the...
Uncommon in Egyptian press, al-Dustour publishes excerpts of the Human Rights Watch report on Egypt, 2005, revealing many problems in Egypt.
Coptic activist Majdī Khalīl claims discrimination against Copts in Egypt and cites a number of incidents where Copts are openly discriminated against and treated unfairly by authorities.
The author states that the Muslim Brotherhood may be the only opposition in parliament currently, but that it would turn Egyptians’ lives into a living hell.
Khālid Bura‘ī presents a list of banned books in Egypt.
A discussion of homosexuality and Egyptian law taken from a bachelor’s thesis on Egyptian law.
Fahmī Huwaydī examines the issue of the "offensive” newspaper cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad and the newspaper’s reluctance to apologize.

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