Displaying 5681 - 5690 of 5807.
Hafez Abou Se’da, secretary general of the Egyptian Organization for Human Rights (EOHR), admits accepting foreign funds and aid. But the charter of the organization states certain conditions for accepting funds, Se’da adds. In fact, the government itself forced them to take foreign funds, since it...
A few days ago, the Egyptian Organization for Human Rights issued a detailed report about Al-Koshh incident. The government announced that it was full of mistakes and it was issued specifically to serve foreign organizations that are anti-Egypt.
Amr Mousa, Minister of Foreign Affairs, recently communicated with a number of countries including Japan and European countries, to correct the wrong image given about Egypt following Al-Koshh events.
The paper interviewed people in the street, actors, actresses and journalists who all stressed the unity between Muslims and Christians. Dr. William Qilada discusses the Hamayouni law. The paper is convinced countries as Britain and Israel would like to see Egypt’s national unity destroyed.
At the same time that Britain claimed that Egypt’s Copts are being crucified and persecuted, British racism has presented a new chapter in the series of Muslim persecution in the land of the alleged just empire.
If the Sunday Telegraph was interested in the issues of minorities, and if it really cared about the rights of minorities, it would have concentrated more on the issue of Catholics in Northern Ireland.
Egypt’s Information Office in New Delhi invited Indian journalists to visit Egypt to see the real events instead of quoting falsified reports of British papers claiming Egypt’s Copts are persecuted. An Egyptian media councilor in New Delhi clarified that Christina Lamb’s report which was quoted by...
A message sent by the youth of Al-Koshh village to Al-Ahali newspaper said that the main reason for the blowing up of events was due to the cover-up of the media and security.
Nagiub Nassif and Wagih Kheiry Ekladious have both withdrawn their legal case against the General Guide of the Ikhwan Al-Muslimun (Muslim Brothers)
The Sunday Telegraph reacted to the pressure from a number of prominent Coptic businessmen by publishing a statement signed by 2000 Copts rejecting the allegations and lies propagated by the paper about persecution of Copts in Egypt.

الصفحات

اشترك ب