Displaying 21 - 30 of 46.
Sa‘d al-Dīn Ibrāhīm began a thorough investigation into all employees after information about the investigation conducted with him by U.S. bodies was leaked to the press.
Dr. Sa‘d al-Dīn Ibrāhīm was investigated because of his defence of the Muslim Brotherhood and for the series of articles he wrote for an Egyptian daily titled "The Ugly American."
The state security arrested, last week, a new Muslim Brotherhood organization headed by a professor of at the Nuclear Energy Authority and seized for the first time survey forms contain questions about the kind of obstacles facing the group activities in the society.
The author attacks Sudanese thinker Hasan al-Turābī, describing him as a failed Sunnī version of al-Khūmaynī. He says that his thoughts are contradicted and twisted.
The author asserts that the Muslim Brotherhood uses research and studies centers as a mean to practice politics, through making statements and publishing articles’ carrying the Islamic group’s ideology.
The article reports on disputes among the Muslim Brotherhood over its stance towards the judges’ crisis and the idea of establishing a political party.
The spokesman and general coordinator of the Egyptian Movement for Change, Kifāya, George Ishāq, has been interrogated by leaders of the movement about his participation in a dubious U.S. conference, held last month in Istanbul, Turkey and attended by a large number of Israeli academics.
The author spoke about Qinā governor Majdī Ayoub Iskandar, who is the third Christian governor in the history of Egypt, the reasons for his appointment and his view of Muslim- Christian relations in Egypt.
This four-page feature is investigates the blackmailing ways of the independent press that keeps attacking the government for their own interests, benefiting by securing as many newspaper advertisments as they can from the government in exchange for toned down criticism.
The Egyptian authorities have started a large-scale arrest campaign against members of the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood, but the reasons for the detentions remain unclear to most observers.

Pages

Subscribe to