Displaying 11 - 20 of 126.
The problem does not lie in religions but in their followers who accuse followers of different religions of being unfaithful which eventually leads to fundamentalism.
The article reports on the inauguration ceremony of the first Catholic church in Qatar’s capital city Doha.
On February 12, Arab countries adopted a charter which puts limits on Arab satellite channels and prohibits offending political and religious figures. Qatar has rejected the document and Lebanon has expressed its reservations. The article outlines the repercussions of the incident.
The following lines provide information about Dr. Butrus Butrus Ghālī’s agenda. Dr. Ghālī is the chairman of the National Council for Human Rights in Egypt. He recently met a delegation from the U.S Congress and discussed the different complaints against Egypt that have been presented to the...
A Syrian radical cleric ‘Umar Bakrī has been prevented from entering the U.K. due to media reports on his controversial stances toward the bombing attacks that have recently taken place in Britain. Bakrī, the founder of al-Muhajiroun Movement in the U.K., calls on British authorities either to try...
Through his lawyer, Dr. Sa‘d al-Dīn ibrāhīm is threatening three Egyptian newspapers by announcing that he will file claims against them if they do not publish retractions for their “attacks” against Dr. Ibrāhīm.
Islamic democracy is a new lie intended to deceive the world. The Islamic discourse of Muslim scholars and preachers differs according to the target audience. The only solution for the problems of Muslim societies is to separate between religion and the state.
The article criticizes the head of the Ibn Khaldoun Center for Development Studies, Dr. Sa‘d al-Dīn Ibrāhīm, for defaming his country by issuing fake reports about internal problems within Egypt and for contacting the U.S. in an attempt to reduce the annual aid that Egypt receives.
The prominent Egyptian intellectual Tarek Heggy wrote about a number of topics related to the developments in the Egyptian and Arab arenas, sending a number of press messages to figureheads in the Arab world.
The author fiercely attacks Sa‘d al-Dīn Ibrāhīm, accusing him of giving up his values, inciting hatred between people and resorting to any means to acquire foreign funding. He also hints that Ibrāhim must be tried on the charge of damaging Egypt’s national security.

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