The lofty Mount Lebanon, renowned for its scenic beauty, cedar trees and ambrosial, fragrant air, has abruptly shifted towards the Mediterranean, to the sky-scraping beachfront of the Lebanese capital Beirut, reeking with the revolting stench of rubbish dumps.
With only a few days left until Eid al-Adha, the Israeli occupation wants to prove to the whole world and to us Arabs that it controls the Al-Aqsa Mosque and intends to rebuild Solomon’s Temple.
The Copts have suddenly become the Salafi Nour Party’s escape from disbandment ever since the Administrative Court obliged the Political Parties Affairs Committee to examine the legal position of parties with a religious bent before the start of the parliamentary elections. Sources within the party said it is granting membership to a large number of Copts so as to refute its religious nature.
The surgeon came out of the room to tell the family that he needs to insert an arterial stint in the heart of their loved one, who was lying under light anaesthesia in a neighbouring makeshift room in a residential building-cum-hospital in Cairo.
I write this not to defend the former agriculture minister or his colleagues - charged last week with corruption - but to defend law and justice, and to suggest an alternative to fight corruption.
I cannot believe the government is overlooking the new prime minister's reputation. How could the man have been chosen without anyone explaining his relationship with the main suspect in the Agriculture Ministry’s corruption case?
The Arab region, among all regions, seems to be like a boiling cauldron. In some countries, the long stability of despotic regimes, which was widespread across the entire Arab map, has dissipated; some were able to relatively regain it, while others couldn't.
After availing themselves to much media manipulation and to political machinations, women in Egypt are back in a very familiar place and one where they have been before. The state is paying lip service to their rights but dismantling their abilities to mobilise.
Press TV has interviewed Michel Chossudovsky, with the Center for Research on Globalization in Montreal, to discuss Russia’s decision to provide Damascus with military supplies and humanitarian aid. What follows is a rough transcription of the interview. Press TV: Russia’s call for the world to join and help the Syrian government in fighting ISIL terrorists, seems to have fallen on deaf ears at least in Washington. Instead, we have the US president saying that Moscow’s strategy in Syria is doomed to failure. Two questions here: First of all, what is Russia’s strategy that the West is so opposed to? And second: Why is the West so worried about what it calls an alleged Russian build-up in Syria?
If your daughter or brother just disappeared, you would probably go to the police. But what if the police were the ones who took them? That is the reality for thousands of families in Egypt, where the government is carrying out a brutal crackdown on dissent and freedom of expression. Ha'na el Taweel's daughter Esraa has been held without trial in Egypt for more than three months, and human rights groups say she is just one of thousands political prisoners being locked up for simply protesting or being associated with certain movements.
Here's my four-sentence review of Dr. Tawfik Hamid's new book Inside “Jihad: How Radical Islam Works; Why It Should Terrify Us; How to Defeat It.” Buy this book. Read this book. Refer to this book. Share this book. I've read and reviewed counter-jihad classics by bestselling experts including Robert Spencer, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Bernard Lewis, Andrew Bostom, Wafa Sultan, Brigitte Gabriel, Mosab Hassan Yousef, and Phyllis Chesler. I think highly of each. This is how good Inside Jihad is. If someone said to me, "I want to read just one book about jihad." I'd give that reader Dr. Hamid's book.
A helicopter view of our society would certainly show that Egyptians are apparently strongly attached to their religions. Hundreds of visible mosques and churches, many of them built over 1,000 years ago, have earned Cairo the name of ‘the city of a thousand minarets’.
Euromoney is a British company that organizes conferences, provides consultation and publishes financial analyses. It is not an international entity that accredits or discredits, although its reports and conferences may give a negative or positive impression of a certain economy.
It is the beginning of their nightmares. Many Palestinians go to bed every night without knowing if their homes will be bulldozed during the night by the Israeli police. According to Jeff Halper, founder of the Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions (ICAHD), house demolitions are one of Israel’s main weapons of occupation of Palestinian land.
A popular campaign in Egypt has been launched advocating the disbanding of religiously oriented parties. The campaign started generating support and has already gathered 4,000 signatures.
I thought there were monopolies among steel or cement producers, but I never thought there was a monopoly in the movie business. This must be an Egyptian innovation. The last thing I expected was for the Culture Minister to turn a blind eye to the corruption that has been prevailing for years, the seeds of which were planted perhaps in good faith by former Minister Farouk Hosny. The story began when Hosny issued a decision allowing movie theaters to have only 10 copies of foreign films, which they would take from the Chamber of the Film Industry.
I thought there were monopolies among steel or cement producers, but I never thought there was a monopoly in the movie business. This must be an Egyptian innovation.
Understandably, the sit-in by junior policemen in Sharqiya made the headlines this week, just as last week’s news led with the demonstration against the new civil service law by Finance Ministry employees.
English archaeologist Nicholas Reeves has said that the tomb of Queen Nefertiti, wife of King Akhenaten, could be inside the tomb of Tutankhamun.
Who is responsible for the horrifying confrontations at Rabaa El-Adawiya square two years ago? Was it possible to avoid this clash or was it inevitable?
Others
Hostages appear to leave the Bataclan concert hall as siege ends with two attackers reportedly having been killed