Hot No Under Oil In The Police Press in Egypt
- Use: Cooking Oil
- Type:Cooking Oil Press Machine
- Production Capacity: 100TPD, 99%
- Motor power: 280V
- Dimension(L*W*H): 1400*1500*1100mm
- Specification: 3806*1238*3418
- Color: handpainted
- Market: Egypt
How Brute Violence Became Egypt’s Answer to Virtually
On August 14, 2013, Egyptian police and military forces violently dispersed a largely peaceful sit-in protesting the military’s removal of Egypt’s first elected leader, Mohamed Morsy. They
Law No. 3 tasks the armed forces with “assisting, and fully coordinating with the police, in guarding and protecting public and vital facilities and buildings including power stations
From Bad Cop to Good Cop: The Challenge of Security Sector
Omar Ashour زميل سابق في بروكنجز. Omar Ashour discusses the political dynamics of transforming Egypt’s security establishment. Ashour lays out the workings of the Mubarak regime
Egyptian police attacked protesters who tore down a billboard of President Hosni Mubarak in a northern city Monday in the second day of violence fueled by anger over low wages and rising prices.
Egypt’s Failed Revolution | The New Yorker
Members of the Egyptian Presidential press corps were waiting for the evening’s briefing. I sat with Fathya Eldakhakhny, a reporter for Al-Masry Al-Youm , a privately owned newspaper.
Egypt cracks down on police corruption. Six hundred Egyptian police officers and commanders are being investigated for corruption in cases opened in the past six months, judicial and security
Police State Egypt: The war on journalism, The New Arab
In the past three and a half years, Egypt has seen an accelerating deterioration in the state of press freedom amid interference of the security state in the country's media scene and heavy restrictions placed on journalists. Last December, Egypt's president ratified a new law regulating media outlets that will further control the media.
Police there closed on the crowd, firing tear gas as the demonstrators pelted them with stones. A stone struck the officer firing the gas from the top of the truck and the truck pulled back, but
Egypt: Freedom in the World 2024 Country Report | Freedom House
Overview. President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, who first took power in a 2013 coup, has governed Egypt in an authoritarian manner. Meaningful political opposition is virtually nonexistent, as expressions of dissent can draw criminal prosecution and imprisonment. Civil liberties, including press freedom and freedom of assembly, are tightly restricted.
Egypt has built 60 new prisons since the 2011 revolution, almost all under Mr. el-Sisi, according to news reports and the Cairo-based Arabic Network for Human Rights Information, which was