CAIRO: Egyptians living abroad continue to sign up on the website of the Supreme Electoral Committee to be able to vote in the upcoming constitutional referendum before registration ends on Monday.
Confusion prevailed at the 50-member constitutional committee after committee members submitted requests to alter the roadmap and hold the presidential elections before the parliamentary elections.
CAIRO: Eleven revolutionary movements and political parties and 15 political activists called for an organized protest at Talaat Harb Square on Monday.
CAIRO: Head of Journalists Syndicate and 50-committee member Diaa Rashwan said no constitution in the world includes the freedom of media and of citizens as the newly adopted one in Egypt.
Bassem Youssef is scheduled to be the guest of Yousry Foda’s ONTV talk show “Akher Kalam” on Wednesday evening, making it his first appearance since the suspension of his program on the network CBC.
The 50-member committee approved all articles related to powers of parliament (articles 101-138) before adjourning for Saturday night.
Cairo University holds security services responsible for the violent acts that took place with the students on Thursday, saying it will document the incident with pictures and videos to report to the authorities and bring the wrongdoers to account.
WASHINGTON: Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel telephoned his Egyptian counterpart on Saturday to voice U.S. concerns about a new Egyptian law that curbs protests and has prompted the arrest of a group of Egyptian girls and political activists, a spokesman said.
The National Defence Council met on Saturday, headed by interim President Adly Mansour, to discuss recent developments, after which the presidency released a statement reiterating the state’s commitment to respect freedom of expression, but also to ensure the safety of citizens.
CAIRO: The Journalists’ Syndicate, in cooperation with the General Union for Palestinian Women, will celebrate the International Day for Solidarity with the Palestinian People on Sunday at 5 pm in the Journalists’ Syndicate.
Prime Minister Hazem al-Beblawy expressed disappointment over incidents that took place on Tuesday when demonstrators protested before the Shura Council.
CAIRO: Minister of Planning Ashraf El-Araby presented on Wednesday at a government meeting a report about progress made in stimulating the economy, saying that delivery rates witnessed an increase in comparison to previous periods, Youm7 reported.
The Interior Ministry said it has approved a request to protest in Cairo's Talaat Harb Square on Wednesday. The ministry announced the protest could take place in downtown between 4-10 pm, after which it would be dispersed. The statement acknowledged that protesters were "expressing their rejection of the protest law and demanding the release" of those detained the day before.
CAIRO: Peaceful demonstrations should not be dispersed violently, said Hasan Shahin, member of Tamarod movement political office in a phone call to Tahrir satellite channel.
The Egyptian police tried for the first time on Tuesday to implement a controversial law on protests which was issued by the president earlier this week.
Tamarod co-founder Hassan Shahin has announced he will go "on strike" until protesters arrested outside the Shura Council on Tuesday are freed.
In response to the alleged stealing of samples from the Great Pyramid by two German amateur archaeologists, Egypt's antiquities ministry issued a press release Wednesday discrediting all findings by the German pair.
ALEXANDRIA: Alexandria’s Misdemeanor Court sentenced 14 girls affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood to 11 years and one month in prison Wednesday on charges of hindering traffic, and being members of a banned group that aims to destabilize the country.
Egyptian-German writer Hamed Abdel-Samad, suspected to have been kidnapped in Cairo Sunday, has returned to his hotel on his own volition, a security official told state news agency MENA Wednesday.
Former judge Mahmoud El-Khodeiry was arrested in Alexandria late Monday, reported the Middle East News Agency (MENA), on accusations of supervising torture, according to one of the defendant's lawyers.
Some Gulf countries have recently tried to persuade the government to go back to negotiations with the IMF on a $2 billion loan, but the Finance Ministry rejected the matter, saying that the Egyptian economy does not currently need a loan, after the gap in the budget had been bridged through Arab aid, say government sources.
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