Displaying 11 - 20 of 36.
The recent recommendations of the National Council for Human Rights (N.CH.R.) to remove any religious reference from national identity cards and its repeated calls to replace the emergency law with anti-terrorism legislation have brought it into confrontation with the government, which believes...
Bilāl al- Dawwī expects a "bargain" between the supreme guide of the Muslim Brotherhood, Muhammad Mahdī ‘Ākif, and the Egyptian government after he was denied the right to go on a ‘umrah a few weeks ago. He also discusses recent financial difficulties facing the group and which he says are...
Muhammad Mahdī ‘Ākif stirred controversy by suggesting the existence of a private Brotherhood army while at the same time causing friction within the ruling National Democratic Party with his recent statements.
The author discusses the article of Dr. Sa‘d al-Dīn Ibrāhīm, published in the Washington Post, in which he urged the American administration to have dialogue with Islamist groups in the Middle East, like Palestine’s Hamās, Lebanon’s Hizb Allāh and Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood.
The author reports on the splits that recently emerged amongst Muslim Brotherhood members and leaders. He reviews the stories of the four members who resigned and the reasons behind their stance.
The author reports on the celebrations in the Minia governorate of the anniversary of the passing of the virgin Mary and her son through Jabal al-Tayr area in Samāllūt during the holy journey.
The author reports controversial statements by a leading Brotherhood member during a symposium of the Egyptian Bar Association in which he said detention centers were the place for members of the group.
In his interview with al-Maydān, the spokesman of the Muslim Brotherhood, Muhammad al -Katātinī comments that the group does not want Jamāl Mubarak to participate in the next presidential elections and demands equal opportunities for every Egyptian citizen.
The author opposes the growing presence of the leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood in seminars and conferences as he believes they are exploiting such gatherings for their own interests.
The danger of Khayrat al- Shātir, the most powerful decision-maker of the Muslim Brotherhood, lies not only in his wealth and his total control over the group’s money, but also in his belongingto a group called "the extremist Qutbīyun" or the followers of the extremist thinker Sayyid Qutb.

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