Displaying 2001 - 2010 of 2285.
Ḥāfiẓ Abū Si‘dah reports on torture cases in Egyptian prisons and security departments.
Many complaints were submitted to Pope Shenouda from individuals alleging that they had been treated poorly by priests.
The State Security office refuses to execute a ruling to allow a Muslim born child to join her Coptic mother. The author writes about compliance between the minister of interior and the state security.
Ahmad al-Qā‘ūd reports on the first training program for press that will cover crises held by al-Qistās group for legal and constitutional rights.
Sectarian violence rocked the Egyptian village of Bimhā, Giza, sparked by Muslim’s anger over alleged Coptic plans to build a church. Violence left 11 Copts injured and 30-Christian owned homes and businesses damaged.
The incidents of sectarian violence in the Egyptian village of Bimhā provoked commentators who believe that the scenario of sectarian unrest related to church building has repeatedly occurred, demanding that the government take prompt actions to resolve the problem of church construction.
The author highlights two incidents that the Islamic world witnessed during the last week that expose the real magnitude of the sectarian crisis and clearly define its dimensions.
The application of the Islamic Sharī‘ah in Egypt does not indicate any form of separation between Muslims and Copts.
Al-Shaymā’ ‘Abd al-Latīf interviews Shaykh Ibrāhīm al-Fayyūmī, general secretary of the Islamic Research Academy.
The administrative judiciary court considers the appeal over a unified law draft for Copts’ personal status.

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