Amid the intense and violent debate that engulfs Egypt on every crisis, whether it is economic, political or the result of acts of violence or terror, we can observe this time with that the ongoing discussions arise from mental images regarding (...)
Statements made by Sudanese President Omar El-Bashir accusing Egypt of being involved in armed engagements in Darfur represent a new and unprecedented pinnacle in the Sudanese escalation operation against Egypt.
This escalation, which has been (...)
Following the horrific terrorist bombing in St's Peter Church in Abbasiya, Cairo, the suspect in this suicide attack was identified in a very brief time and also the cell that offered support and backup.
It became clear that the operation's threads (...)
Severe criticism of the situation in Egypt published by the internationally renowned Economist magazine launched a huge wave of reactions.
Some found in it support and backing for criticisms circulating on a wide scale of the way and style of (...)
In December 2014, the Turkish writer and activist Abdul-Rahman Dilibak, who was one of the close associates and defenders of now-President Erdogan, announced shocking testimony about the founding of the Turkish Justice and Development Party in which (...)
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's recent tour of the Nile Basin provoked a storm of comments which ranged between shock by the obviousness of the successful Israeli encirclement in the Nile Basin to feelings of astonishment, indignation (...)
A vicious war is being waged against Egypt in Sudan. It was initiated by the Sudanese Embassy in Cairo when it issued a general and vague statement protesting “maltreatment” of Sudanese in Egypt.
Soon after came another statement from the Sudanese (...)
Egypt would never oppose a developmental project in the Nile basin. It does its best to help and has a record of lending a helping hand. Its only condition is that the project in question will not harm Egypt, which depends on the Nile for about 95 (...)
Immediately following Egypt's 25 January Revolution, Ethiopia, taking advantage of the internal upheaval, moved to increase the capacity of the Renaissance Dam it plans to build on the River Nile.
The reservoir capacity is now set for 74 billion (...)
The secession of South Sudan did not come as a surprise. It had been the most likely outcome since the Machakos Protocol was signed in 2002. Under this framework agreement, Khartoum was obliged to grant the right of self-determination to the South (...)
For Egypt, the managed partition of Sudan would not spell disaster, but a descent into chaos would, writes Hani Raslan*
Sudan is going through yet another trauma, and even it may not be the last. Never since 1956, when the country got its (...)