Due to Egypt’s dire political and economic situation, pain and alienation are bound to be a feature of the lives of many for years to come.
ترى من سينتصر في النهاية: الشعب و الرئيس، أم مافيا الشرطة والداخلية؟
A conversation about journalism and research in times of uprising and repression on the fourth anniversary of Egypt's Rabaa massacre.
The view that social struggle should be repressed is hindering the opposition. Unless the view of the state and its coercive apparatus changes, the chances of wide scale social transformation are limited.
If the Qatari crisis is not managed rationally, then it is likely to compound the present risks in the regional balance of power, with consequences for all states in the region.
The people of Egypt need to accept that they have to forge their own path to democracy, which at this point in history will most likely come at a bloody price.
No conflict in the Middle East spares the Palestinians, and the recent crisis in the GCC is no exception.
The Egyptian regime is moving decisively to close what remains of public space, dominating all aspects of political life for decades to come.
NGOs play an essential role in local communities; the government’s reckless, repressive actions will jeopardize the country’s future.
What was truly ironic about the Arab legal case was that Arab representatives at the 1967 UNSC laid out the legal justification for what Israel did, beginning on June 5.
“Our principles remind us that not justice, but oppression will inevitably result from an unrestrained one-man rule that is unaccountable, unchecked and unstoppable…”.