Displaying 1 - 10 of 13.
In commemoration of the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women, Egypt is to celebrate this day on 25 November, 2018, in the Egyptian National Museum at Tahrir Square [Maydān al-Taḥrīr, or (Midan al-Tahrir).
  Interviewers: Quinta Smit, Eline Kasanwidjojo   Language of interview: Arabic not mentioned (original interview), English (presented transcript)   Interpreter: ʿAmr Sharīf   Transcript: not mentioned   Approval: Approved by interviewee     Interview with ʿAlī Khafāgī, Secretary General of the...
The Qasr al-Dūbārah Church near al-Tahrīr Square denied that it had closed its doors before the wounded in the clashes on al-Qasr al-'Aynī street. "The clinic and the field hospital have never closed their gates since December 18," according to Eva Butrus, the coordinator of the Qasr al-Dūbārah...
Revolutionary grafitti is gradually being removed by local authorities.
**Article linked to in text has since been removed W. Winston Skinner reported on September 17, 2015 in the Times-Herald that an Egyptian native Christian missionary, in the article called pastor X, “told about 95 people at the International Leadership Team in Carrollton on Tuesday that...
Arab West Report met with Ihāb al-Kharrāt in his office just off Tahrir Square on March 15, 2014, shortly before the presidential elections. Kharrāt is one of the founding members of the Egyptian Social Democratic Party, and though the party remained neutral, he endorsed Hamdīn Sabbāhī, one of the...
  On Friday, the 25th I was in Tahrir for many hours meeting people and discussing the future of Egypt. I saw a few young men with faces covered in black. “These belong to the Black Bloc,” George Missīhah said, who had led a march from his hometown, Qanātir to Tahrir. This is a new group, fighters...
The headlines in the West will read, ‘Mubārak sentenced to life imprisonment.’ They may also say, ‘Egyptians take to the street in protest.’ Confused? Unless one reads more deeply the obvious connection must be that protestors wanted his head, literally. The reality is rather simple, just not...
The condition of Egypt is quietly very concerning these days. I say quietly for two reasons. First, in terms of the Western audience, most is slipping under the radar. Second, in terms of Egypt, the nation waits for presidential elections, and the areas of concern are easily ignored if no attention...
In Tahrīr and in squares throughout the nation, Egyptians once again filled public space. In fact, by appearances they did so in greater numbers than at the height of the January 25 revolution which deposed President Mubārak. What is not clear altogether is why they were there, or who they...

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