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Fatma Said born and raised in Cairo, where she attended the Deutsche Schule der Borromäerinnen Kairo. [4] [5] Her father, Ahmed Hassan Said, was the first president of the Free Egyptians Party founded during the 2011 Egyptian revolution.
Tamr Henna Arabic: تمر حنه ("Tamarind") is a 1957 Egyptian musical drama film directed by Hussein Fawzy. The film stars some of Egypt's most prominent stars of the era, including Ahmed Ramzy , Rushdy Abaza , Fayza Ahmed , Naima Akef , and Zeinat Sedki . [ 1 ]
Egypt has had differing multi-party systems since independence, with a hiatus between 1953 and 1977, after which the current party law was enacted. [1] Nevertheless, in practice the National Democratic Party was the long-time ruling party and dominated the Egyptian political arena, first under president Anwar Sadat, and then president Hosni Mubarak from its foundation in 1978, up until its ...
Presidential elections were held in the United Arab Republic (now Egypt) on 15 March 1965. [1] The election took the form of a referendum on the candidacy of Gamal Abdel Nasser, who ran unopposed. He allegedly won with almost seven million votes, and only 65 against. [2] Voter turnout was stated to be 99%. [2]
The Civil Democratic Movement [1] (Arabic: الحركة المدنية الديمقراطية, romanized: al-Ḥarakah al-Madanīyah al-Dīmuqrāṭīyah; also called the National Civil Movement) [2] is a liberal political movement formed in Egypt in 2017. [3]
The Liberation Rally (Arabic: هيئة التحرير, romanized: Hayʾa at-Taḥrīr) was a short-lived political organization created after the Egyptian revolution of 1952 to organize popular support for the government.
Members of the Egyptian women’s beach volleyball team have spoken out against France’s hijab ban for its athletes after competing in an Olympic beach volleyball match wearing modest clothing.
Other HADITU splinter groups included Toward an Egyptian Communist Party (NAHSHAM) [4] [12] and the Progressive Liberation Front. [13] [14] Leaders of Gat included Issamuddin Jilal, Ahmed Taha, Ismail Jibr, Salah Salma and Ehia al-Mazsi. [14] In the wake of the January 1950 election in Egypt, the political climate was normalized somewhat.