Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Al Gomhuria was established in 1954 following the Egyptian revolution [2] [3] and became the new regime's leading media outlet. [4] The paper was published using the facilities of Wafd party's newspaper Al Misri, which had been banned and forced to shut down by the regime. [4]
Egyptian novelist Gamal el-Ghitani is one of the former contributors and editors-in-chief of the daily. [9] He was appointed to the post in 1985. [9] Another prominent Egyptian author Anis Mansour was also the editor-in-chief of the daily. [10] In January 2011 Mohamed Barakat was appointed editor-in-chief, replacing Mohamed Mahdy Fadly in the ...
This category contains articles with Egyptian Arabic-language text. The primary purpose of these categories is to facilitate manual or automated checking of text in other languages. The primary purpose of these categories is to facilitate manual or automated checking of text in other languages.
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Al Maarif is an Arabic daily newspaper that has been published in Egypt since 1963. History and profile ...
An international Arabic-language edition called Al Ahram al Duwali has been published daily in London since 1984. It is printed in both London and Paris and is distributed throughout Europe, USA, Canada and Egypt. Two foreign-language weekly versions are also produced: the English Al-Ahram Weekly (founded in 1991) and the French Al-Ahram Hebdo.
Akhbar el-Yom was founded by the Amin brothers, Mustafa Amin and Ali Amin, on 6 November 1944. [2] The paper is released weekly on Saturdays. The newspaper is owned by the Shura Council and considered a semi-official newspaper.
Professor Springborg was himself accused of being a "conspirator against Egypt’s stability" on 7 December 2011 Arabic-language edition of Al-Masry al-Youm. The self-censorship episode prompted the staff of Egypt Independent to write that "even after 25 January, self-censorship still plagues Egyptian media. As an Egyptian newspaper, we, too ...
The number of Arabic newspapers in Egypt was about 200 in 1938. [1] There were also 65 newspapers published in languages other than Arabic, [ 1 ] such as Turkish , French and English . [ 2 ] By 1951 Arabic language newspapers numbered to about 400, while 150 were published in other languages. [ 1 ]