- Strong bonds and brotherhood on the battlefield
Sebastian Junger is the author of several best-selling books, including The Perfect Storm . His journalism has focused on war reporting, and in 2007 he and British photographer Tim Hetherington went to the Korengal Valley in Afghanistan... セバスチャンユンガーはパーフェクトストームを含むいくつかのベストセラーの本の著者です
- Egypt: protests continue in run up to elections – live
• Egyptian activist killed in Cairo• Tens of thousands of people return to Tahrir Square • Syria misses new Arab League deadline• Moderate Islamist party claims win in Morocco elections9.57am: Welcome to Middle East Live for rolling coverage of protests across the region. You can follow me on Twitter @David_Batty.Here's a round up of the latest developments:Egypt• An Egyptian demonstrator was killed early this morning outside the cabinet building in Cairo, where pro-democracy protesters camped overnight to block the entrance of the newly appointed prime minister, Kamal al-Ganzouri. Egyptians flocked to Tahrir Square yesterday for a huge demonstration against the military rulers. The number of people gathered in the square, the heart of pro-democracy protests, was estimated at more than 100,000. There have also been smaller protests in Alexandria, Damanhour, Mahalla Al-Kubra, Mansoura, Suez, Sohag and Tanta.• A much smaller pro-military demonstration also took place in Cairo yesterday. Around 15,000 people are estimated to have joined the rally at one point. Some foreign journalists were attacked at the rally. • The Muslim Brotherhood has expressed its support for the elections. In leaflets distributed outside mosques, the group said it was putting the national interest ahead of its own. The Brotherhood did not take part in today's demonstrations.Syria• Syria has missed a deadline set by the Arab League for it to allow in international observers or face a vote on sanctions. The league meets today to decide on sanctions, said deputy secretary-general Ahmed Ben Heli. The punishments could include halting flights and imposing a freeze on financial dealings and assets.• Ten Syrian troops and several armed dissidents were killed in clashes late on Friday night in the town カイロで殺さ•エジプト活動•数万人がタハリール広場に戻る•シリアが新しいアラブ連盟の締め切りを逃す•中程度のイスラム主義政党の主張は、モロッコelections9.57amで勝つ:地域全体で抗議行動の報道を展開するためのライブ中東へようこそ
- Egypt's Islamic-Led Bloc Threatens Vote Boycott
Muslim Brotherhood demands changes to prevent many Mubarak supporters from running for office ムスリム同胞団は、オフィス用に実行されているから多くのムバラクの支持を防ぐために変更を要求
- Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood: Longtime Outsiders as New Establishment?
Muslim Brotherhood candidates campaign to give voters a fuller picture of their values null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- EGYPT: Muslim Brotherhood to join talks with Egyptian army
Egypt's powerful Muslim Brotherhood, which anticipates a strong showing in the forthcoming election, will meet with the military council Tuesday to discuss the recent crisis, in which at least 36 people have been killed and more than 1,250 wounded. null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- Egypt Muslim Brotherhood Satisfied With Parliamentary Poll
Movement spokesman Esam Alarian says group will continue sacrificing until democracy is realized null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- Egypt's Islamists Take Commanding Lead in Elections
Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice party in front with 36.6 percent of ballots cast, followed by Salafist Nour party null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- Islamists win 42 seats in run-off of Egypt's 1st stage parliamentary vote: initial results
CAIRO, Dec. 7 (Xinhua) -- Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood and Salafists have won 42 individual seats in the run-off round of the first stage of the country's parliamentary elections, state media reported Wednesday, citing preliminary results.
The two most powerful Islamic forces in Egypt gained 80 percent of the 52 individual seats contested in the run-off, consolidating their gains in the first stage of the multi-phase polls, the Ahram newspaper said. Final results for the second round of vote wi ... null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- Egyptian Islamist forces win 60% of votes in 1st stage parliamentary elections
CAIRO, Dec. 3 (Xinhua) -- Egypt's first stage parliamentary elections saw Islamist forces winning around 60 percent of votes, the official news agency MENA reported Saturday.
Islamist forces, represented mainly by Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party and the Salafist's el-Nour Party, were followed by the Egyptian Bloc, Al-Wasat Party, liberal Al-Wafd Party and the Revolution Continues Alliance, MENA reported, without saying how it obtained the results.
The Egyptian Bloc includes ... null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- EGYPT: Islamists win 65% of the vote in first round of elections
Egypt's Islamists, including the Muslim Brotherhood and the hard-line Salafist party al-Nour, won 65.25 per cent of the vote in the first round of Egypt's legislative elections, according to the electoral commission. Final voting ends in January. null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- Islamists Ahead in Egypt's Elections
Figures released Saturday indicate Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party came out on top in Monday, Tuesday's polling null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- Egypt as crucible of Middle East tensions
The timing of this week's Tahrir Square violence, just days before Egypt's elections and as Syria's uprising nears a climax, suggests internal and external forces are at play. As a visage of leaderless resistance is stripped away to reveal the military's and Islamists' role in Hosni Mubarak's overthrow, suspicions are raised that Iran is using links with the Muslim Brotherhood to instigate riots that distract from its ally's troubles in Damascus. - Victor Kotsev (Nov 23, '11) null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- Libya, Egypt and Syria all face an uncertain future | Ian Black
The Arab uprisings are still unfolding and no one can predict how each country's story will endSeasonal images for the Arab uprisings – spring giving way to summer, autumn and now winter – have a hit or miss quality. But the dramatic events in three countries over one weekend all point to variable weather and uncertain outcomes.Egypt has been the most important chapter from the start because of its sheer size and influence, so state repression and anger at the generals who have ruled since Hosni Mubarak's overthrow are deeply worrying for those still nurturing the hopes born in Tahrir Square in January.The prospects for the parliamentary elections, which are due to start next week, are unclear, although critics argue that they will be meaningless unless the military sets a date for handing over power to civilians. Field Marshal Mohammed Hussein Tantawi, hailed for persuading Mubarak to go, is under mounting pressure to step down himself.Old habits die hard: instead of repealing Egypt's hated emergency law, the generals have extended it, while protecting their own privileges. Increasingly, analysts warn, it looks like a stark choice between the army and the Muslim Brotherhood, still the only really organised political force.In the face of their own gloomy prospects, Egyptians can only envy the smooth running of Tunisia's elections last month, where the success of the Islamist party Nahda underlined the difference between polls rigged by autocrats and free ballots in a multi-party democracy.If Arab and international attention is focusing again on Egypt, events in Syria have taken on a riveting dynamic of their own. A rocket attack on an office of the ruling Ba'ath party in Damascus was further evidence of the growing capability of armed rebels to challenge President Bash null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- New Protest Sweeps Cairo's Tahrir Square
Rally is called by the Muslim Brotherhood in reaction to a government proposal to give the military the final say on major policies null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- As long as Tahrir Square is in action, Tahrir is democracy | Omar Robert Hamilton
Egypt's desperate military and Muslim Brotherhood are trying everything to strangle our revolutionary vigour. They will failFor five days a battle has raged across downtown Cairo between the central security forces (CSF) and unarmed protesters. At least 40 people are dead. Thousands are injured. There are seven field hospitals and hundreds of doctors at work in Tahrir Square.It has centred on Mohamed Mahmoud Street, the road leading from Tahrir Square in the direction of the hated Ministry of the Interior, whose jurisdiction the police forces fall under. For 110 hours revolutionaries and the CSF have fought for its control. The revolutionaries aiming for the ministry; the CSF aiming for Tahrir. The revolutionaries armed with rocks ripped up from the pavements; the CSF armed with shotguns, rifles and CS gas acquired from around the world.I have seen shotgun shells and bullet casings from Italy, China, the US, Libya and the Czech Republic; tear gas canisters from CTS in Pennsylvania and Chemring in Hampshire. And their supply is seemingly unlimited. Egypt bought 32,000 units of tear gas from the US in 2009 alone. At least three people have died from asphyxia.This violence has sparked part two of our revolution, and the pressure on the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) to step aside to democracy is intense. For each body carried away from the front line to the field hospital, another 20 arrive the next day. Monday's proposed elections have lost any glimmer of legitimacy they had. While Tahrir is in action, Tahrir is democracy.But there are key parties with a deep investment in these elections: SCAF and the Muslim Brotherhood. And yesterday they set about working to strangle our renewed revolutionary vigour.Though the Brotherhood has repeatedly declared itself to b null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- Brotherhood lures voters with charity
CAIRO: The weekend's Islamic holiday, which centres on sacrifice and feeding the poor, offered the Muslim Brotherhood a golden opportunity. null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- Egypt's Islamists' Success: A Sign of Nation's Future, or Past?
Banned under the former government, the Muslim Brotherhood has left its newly-formed competitors scrambling to catch up null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood biggest winner
Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood, emerging as the biggest winner in the first round of parliamentary elections, sought to reassure Egyptians that it would not sacrifice personal freedoms in promoting Islamic law.The deputy head of the... null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- Egypt's Islamists Compete for Votes in Runoff Elections
About half of races pit Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party against ultra-conservative Salafist Nour Party null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- Egypt: opportunities, not threats | Editorial
The argument that the country was in too much turmoil to hold elections has, so far, not been borne outFor much of the last year, the rise of political Islam as a beneficiary of the Arab spring has been seen as a problem, not an opportunity. Those who recall the influence that the Muslim Brotherhood's Sayyid Qutb became after his execution in 1966, on the Egyptian ideologue Ayman al-Zawahiri and his pupil Osama bin Laden, discount the schisms that followed. Zawahiri criticised Hamas when it decided to take part in elections for the Palestinian legislative council and denounced the Brotherhood for opposing the use of violence. To see the Brotherhood as a newcomer to democratic politics is not just to object to its social conservatism, but to perpetuate the argument, used for so long by dictators, that the autocrat you know is better than the extremist you don't.Events on the ground are forcing a reassessment. First came the electoral victory in Tunisia of Ennahda, the Islamic party which won 41% of the seats in the constitutional assembly, and which has since formed a transitional government with liberal, secular parties. On Thursday the official results of the first round of Egypt's parliamentary elections were delayed, but the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) are sure now to be returned as the major party.First, the process itself. In one week, the scenes in Egypt have shifted from protesters being gassed and blinded in Tahrir Square to Egyptians queueing for hours in the rain for their first taste of democracy. The worst fears of Tahrir Square have not been realised, and the high turnout has shown that a bigger Egypt lies beyond. This is not to devalue the political struggle that took place there, or the deep reluctance of the Supreme Council of th null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- Backgrounder: Major blocs in Egypt's parliamentary elections
CAIRO, Nov. 28 (Xinhua) -- Egyptians started to cast their ballots on Monday with a high turnout to elect the People's Assembly in the first stage of the polls.
Some 50 parties and 6,591 independents will contest the 498 seats of the major legislature. The following are the major blocs and parties contesting the elections.
The Democratic Alliance has the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) as its most powerful member. The alliance was formed in July and the number of its m ... null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- Historic Vote in Egypt Continues for 2nd Day
Influential Muslim Brotherhood is expected to emerge as the largest power - but without an outright majority null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- Egypt's Brotherhood Claims Lead in Polls, Challenges Military Rule
Partial election results expected Wednesday but media reports say Muslim Brotherhood's bloc has secured more than 40 percent of votes null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- Egypt Set to Announce Election Results
Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party, more conservative al-Nour Salafi Islamist groups both claim strong showing null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- A strong Islamist showing in Egypt's election need not be cause for panic | Issandr El Amrani
It is depressing Islamists have garnered such support, but all is not lost if the Muslim Brotherhood is serious about democracyThe results from the first round of Egypt's parliamentary elections paint a fairly clear picture: Islamists will be a majority in the next parliament, led by the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice party (FJP), and Salafists have exceeded expectations to be, perhaps, the second party in Egypt.This news has profoundly depressed most educated, middle-class Cairenes I know who had hoped that the overthrow of Hosni Mubarak would be followed by a relatively liberal democracy that would be inclusive of moderate Islamists. It is particularly distressing to non-Muslims, who will now fear the Islamisation of public life that has taken place in the last two decades will be accelerated, with full backing from parliament and government leaders in the next few years.That the Muslim Brothers would perform well was expected: after all their electoral machine is excellent, they have experience and a clear message, and are a known quantity. Six months ago, when they promised to only run for a limited number of seats, it was assumed that they would be about 30% of parliament. They may very well pass the 50% mark, having decided to contest a lot more seats than initially expected. They have done so without a broad alliance with other parties, since the Democratic Alliance they belong to is at least 80% FJP.The success of the Salafists is more of a surprise, and must reflect their grassroots presence in Egyptian society. But it is deeply worrisome, because the Salafists have made clear in their statements that they are an illiberal party with extreme views on many topics, whatever their charitable works are. In my opinion they should have never been legalised, null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood continues to alienate itself from the people | Amira Nowaira
As Egyptians lie dying, the Brotherhood's blatant self-interest and arrogance is exposing them to public scrutiny and scornAs the brutal crackdown against peaceful protesters in Cairo and several other Egyptian cities continued unabated for six days running, the Muslim Brotherhood stayed out of the fray, declaring clearly that it would not join the protests.In deciding to stay away from these protests, the Brotherhood may have committed its gravest mistake to date. The footage showing a dead protester being dragged by a security officer and dumped near a rubbish heap, appearing on many satellite channels and the internet, has not only shocked and enraged Egyptians, but it has sent them out on to the streets in their thousands to protest against this outrage.In going out they had no political calculations in mind and no gains to make. They simply wanted their voices to be heard. By staying away, the Brotherhood has sent the message that it rated its self-interest higher than Egyptian blood and its decision has angered many Egyptians, including some of its own members.While this highlights the rift that has been growing over the past few months between the Brotherhood and a significant segment of the population, it also brings to light the various challenges facing the Brotherhood since the overthrow of Mubarak.The first is that after having worked for most of its history as an underground movement, the Brotherhood has suddenly found itself exposed to the public gaze. While such exposure has afforded its members far more visibility and freedom of movement than they have ever enjoyed, it has also made them the object of public scrutiny, criticism and at times even scorn.At one point, a prominent Brotherhood figure went so far as to speak of the organisation in terms almost null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- Egypt's Brotherhood veers to centre, for now
Among the symbols of the Arab Spring is one less photographed and remarked on than the vast gatherings in Tahrir Square - the relocation of the offices of the Muslim Brotherhood, the once banned party now set to take the largest share... null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- Egypt wraps up run-off vote for first stage parliamentary polls
CAIRO, Dec. 6 (Xinhua) -- Egypt wrapped up the run-off round of the first stage of the People's Assembly (lower house of the parliament) elections on Tuesday amid a low turnout.
In the two-day vote, 104 independent candidates competed for 52 seats. The competition was among the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party, the Salafist's Nour Party, the Egyptian Bloc and the Wafd Party.
One constituency in Cairo reported loss or damage of dozens of ballot boxes in the vote. The Supreme A ... null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- Muslim Brotherhood Claims Another Victory in Egyptian Elections
Group says its party won 36 of 56 individual seats contested in 9 provinces, including largest cities of Cairo, Alexandria null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- Egypt army chief to meet party heads after protest
Egypt's military chief of staff Sami Enan was due to meet party leaders on Saturday, a day after protesters converged on Cairo's central Tahrir Square to demand reforms.Enan, who is also the number two in the ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF), invited a range of parties, including the Muslim Brotherhood and the liberal Wafd, the state-owned Al-Ahram newpaper reported. スタッフサミ鏡像のエジプトの軍の長は、抗議者たちはまた、軍の判決最高評議会(SCAF)で第2位のですreforms.Enanを、要求するカイロの中心タハリール広場に収束後の土曜日にパーティーのリーダーを満たすことによるものであった、ムスリム同胞団とリベラルワフド党を含む当事者の範囲を、招待、国有アハラムnewpaperが報じた
- Egypt's Brotherhood, 17 Parties Establish Election Platform
Coalition pledges to push for equality and democratic freedoms 平等と民主的自由を推進する連合の誓約
- “Our Last・Here is one History”
colorful ultimate ambitionとrose for you
- Egypt Declares Muslim Brotherhood Legal
Government's decision clears way for group to field candidates in parliamentary elections set for September 政府の決定は、9月には、議会選挙のフィールド候補者グループのための方法をクリア
- Egypt's PM Prefers Delay in Parliamentary Vote
Remarks come amid growing concerns that vote, scheduled for September, would be unfairly advantageous to Muslim Brotherhood null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- Syrian President Offers Opponents General Amnesty
Facing tide of continuing protests, Assad's offer extends to members of varied political movements including outlawed Muslim Brotherhood 続けて抗議の流れを見開き、アサドの提案はムスリム同胞団を非合法化を含む様々な政治運動のメンバーへの拡張
- Egyptian uprising's reporter: 'Two Egypts have emerged'
Ayman Mohyeldin was the face of al-Jazeera's coverage. Time magazine named him one of the most influential people of 2011In the past 100 days, two Egypts have emerged. One is revolutionary Egypt, driven by ideals and demanding reform and institutional change. And then there is the other Egypt, in which the military tries to maintain law and order. In certain areas, those two Egypts conflict; in other areas, they converge. Right now, they are torn apart and heading in very different directions.When you look at something like the Israeli embassy clashes the other day [in which 350 people were injured when security forces fired teargas and rubber bullets at protesters], from the demonstrators' perspective it's seen as exercising one's right to protest and one's right to demand a re-evaluation of Egypt's relationship with Israel. But from the army's perspective, it's about maintaining security and protecting foreign embassies – specifically, the embassy of a Israel, which, were it to be overrun by protesters, would have broader implications for the country and the military.The one thing that has definitely changed is the dialogue. The fact that there is an ongoing discussion now that really knows very few red lines is a step in the right direction. There's a wider political pluralism on display, what with the Muslim Brotherhood moving out of the shadows and the emergence of new youth leaders, and so on. But the country is taking two steps forward, one step back.You have to bear in mind that the Egyptian military has been completely strained by all this. This is not a modern, sophisticated, agile military. It is a very conventional military, and you just have to look at the type of tanks they are using to block roads to see that this is not an entity comfortable with peaceke して、Ayman Mohyeldinは、アルジャジーラの報道の顔だった
- Damascus vibrations ripple in Baghdad
Every spectrum of Syria's one million strong Iraqi refugee population is watching the revolt unfold with dread. While Iraqi Christians fear emboldened radical Islamic groups, the community's Ba'athists face an uncertain future if the Damascus regime is overthrown. Inside Iraq, the biggest concern for Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki is an empowerment of the Muslim Brotherhood, which would immediately boost Iraq's Sunni groups. - Sami Moubayed (Jun 30, '11) シリアの百万強いイラク難民人口のあらゆるスペクトルは反乱が恐怖で展開見さ
- Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood Seeks Greater Influence
Party spokesman says Muslim Brotherhood will contest half of the parliamentary seats in the September election 党の広報担当者は言うムスリム同胞団が9月の選挙で議席のコンテストの半分
- Burhanuddin Rabbani obituary
Ethnic Tajik jihadi, former president of Afghanistan and head of the peace councilThe appointment of the former president Burhanuddin Rabbani as head of Afghanistan's High Peace Council last year came as a surprise to many. His efforts on behalf of the current president, Hamid Karzai, came to an end when he was assassinated by a suicide bomber, one of two men posing as Taliban envoys. He was 71.Born in the northern Afghan province of Badakhshan, Rabbani was an ethnic Tajik, and so belonged to Afghanistan's main minority group after the traditionally dominant Pashtun, from which members of the Taliban are largely drawn. He went to the Abu Hanifa religious high school in Kabul, then studied Islamic law and theology at Kabul University.In the ferment of campus discussion of the 1960s, Kabul students were fiercely divided between radical Sunni Islamists and secular leftwingers. The latter joined the PDPA, the Moscow-backed People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan, which later ran the country under Soviet protection. Rabbani became a lecturer, and a prominent spokesman, recruiter and theoretician for the Islamists.Between 1966 and 1968 he studied at Cairo's Al-Azhar University, where he developed close links to the Muslim Brotherhood. On returning to Kabul, he became leader of Jamiat-i Islami, the Society of Islam, a long-established movement which disagreed with fundamentalism.When King Zahir Shah was toppled in 1973 by his more dynamic cousin Daoud Khan, who was keen to modernise Afghanistan on secular lines, Rabbani moved to the countryside and advocated rebellion. Sought by the police, he escaped to Saudi Arabia and Pakistan.After Daoud was ousted in a PDPA coup in 1978 and Soviet troops invaded in 1979, Rabbani moved to the Pakist _NULL_
- Syrians Plan 'Day of Rage' Despite Crackdown
Syria's banned Muslim Brotherhood has for the first time directly joined the call for protests シリアの禁止ムスリム同胞団は初めてが直接抗議のコールに参加しました
- Egypt Islamists, liberals form alliance
Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood has joined forces with 17 other parties to form a common platform ahead of legislative elections, media reports say. エジプトのムスリム同胞団は、先に議会選挙の共通のプラットフォームを形成する17他の関係者と力を合わせている、メディアの報道は言う
- Egypt needs a neutral state | Salma El Shahed
It is not possible to fully separate church from state in Egypt. A secularism that respects all religions is neededThe question: What is secularism?I am a Muslim member of Egyptian society. I will vote for a government that protects a civil society, where creed, sex or colour do not determine our standard of living or how people treat one another.The main reason I want a secular state is to limit the power of government. History shows that politicians play the religion card for their own purposes. For Egyptians the clearest example is Anwar Sadat's reintroduction of the Muslim Brotherhood into public life to rally support among the people in face of the leftist socialist opposition. Using the people's attachment to religion he portrayed himself the pious leader as opposed to the secular commies. Although the Muslim Brotherhood was still banned from operating in public life while Sadat made use of it in this way, the fact that the Egyptian people uphold their religious beliefs strongly made his plan work.One lesson to draw from this is that prevention is better than the cure. Extremists are an irregularity in every creed; they will always be present in public life and will always have some sort of support. A secular political scene would not allow extremism to gain momentum. There is nothing wrong with being religious, but politicians should not be allowed to capitalise on it.On paper, the Arab Republic of Egypt has a secular constitution now, which is not based on any religious scriptures: no law dictates that the prime minister has to be of a certain faith. Every man and woman that is a member of this society has the freedom of worship, and in no way will be persecuted against because of his or her religious beliefs. But there are laws that violate this, such as those _NULL_
- Egypt military quizzes reporters over Islamist deal story
Military prosecutors questioned a newspaper editor and a journalist on Friday over a report alleging Egypt's military would back an Islamist group in elections, a source said.The editor of the Wafd party's newspaper and the journalist who wrote the story may be punished for publishing false news if they are unable to back the report, the military source said.The allegation that the military had an arrangement with the Muslim Brotherhood is bound to inflame secular activists who want a September parliamentary election delayed until they can organise themselves. 軍検察は選挙でイスラム教徒のグループをバックアップするエジプトの軍事力を主張する新聞の編集者を、レポートで、金曜日にジャーナリスト疑問、ワフド党党の新聞のソースsaid.Theエディタやストーリーを書いた記者は偽のニュースを公開するために処罰される可能性があります彼らはレポートをバックアップすることができない場合、軍はムスリム同胞団との協定があったことを軍事ソースsaid.Theの主張は、彼らが自分自身を整理することができます延期September議会選挙をする世俗的な活動を煽るにバインドされている
- Braving Scorching Heat, Egyptians Rally to Press for Reforms
Thousands converge on Tahrir Square to urge interim government to speed up pace of reforms, Muslim Brotherhood is not participating 何千人ものムスリム同胞団が参加していない、改革のペースをスピードアップするために暫定政府を促すためのタハリール広場に収束する
- Could Muslim Brotherhood Take Over Egypt?
Many analysts believe that Muslim Brotherhood is poised for impressive showing in parliamentary elections 多くのアナリストは、ムスリム同胞団は、議会選挙で印象的な上映を遂げようとしてされていることを信じて
- What the Bin Laden files could tell us
Instead of focusing only on what kind of food and personality Osama bin Laden had, fundamental issues can be addressed by sifting through his information trove - relations with Pakistan's Inter-Service Intelligence, Iran, the Muslim Brotherhood and al-Qaeda's penetration of the West. - Walid Phares (Aug 8, '11) _NULL_
- What Egyptians Want Now: Not Necessarily The Muslim Brotherhood
Call it belated full disclosure. Ever since the ouster of president Hosni Mubarak earlier this year, the Muslim Brotherhood has reemerged as a major force in Egyptian politics. For most of that time, however, it has played coy about its political aspirations and ideological agenda. These days, though, the Islamist movement has become a great deal more frank about its plans for Egypt. それは遅ればせながらの完全な情報開示を呼び出します
- News Analysis: Muslim Brotherhood eyes big political role
The Muslim Brotherhood, one of Egypt's most powerful political forces, aims to play a big role in Egypt's future politics after decades of oppression from the previous governments.
The group announced Saturday to form its own Freedom and Justice Party, which aims to contest between 45 and 50 percent of the parliamentary seats in the upcoming elections.
As the formerly ruling National Democratic Party (NDP) was dissolved in mid-April by a court, the Muslim Brotherhood is believed to ... ムスリム同胞団は、エジプトの最も強力な政治勢力のいずれか、以前の政府からの抑圧の十年後にエジプトの将来の政治の中で大きな役割を果たすことを目指しています
- Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood holds 1st open vote
CAIRO - EGYPT'S largest political group, the Muslim Brotherhood, held its first open internal election on Saturday since the ouster of President Hosni Mubarak, in an attempt to burnish its democratic credentials ahead of parliamentary polls later this year. After decades spent underground because of an official ban, the public vote is also part of a concerted push by the Islamist group to show off its organisation and dispel its reputation as a secretive and closed group. It looks poised to win big at the November polls, largely because of its well-organised political machine and social outreach programs. カイロ - エジプトの最大の政治団体、ムスリム同胞団は、今年後半に控え、議会の投票の民主的資格を磨くための試みで、ムバラク大統領の追放以来、土曜日に初のオープンな内部選挙を開催しました
- Clashes greet Irish holiday
Northern Ireland's divisive annual July 12 holiday got off to a violent start last night with riots in several parts of Belfast. Every July 12, tens of thousands of members of the Orange Order, a Protestant brotherhood dedicated... 北アイルランドの対立を毎年7月12日の休日は、ベルファストのいくつかの部分で暴動で最後の夜暴力的なスタートを切りました
- B'z 北米ツアー生中継配信
b'z live-gym 2011 -long time no see-
ロサンゼルス・club nokia公演セットリスト
( 太字 は視聴する事ができた曲)
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