خطف.. إغراء.. إغواء.. تواطؤ.. قصة حب.. توصيفات متعددة لجرائم اختفاء القبطيات وهناك العديد يحاولون الإنكار، ولكن الواقع يؤكد أننا أمام قضية تحرق وطن وتقسمه بين جاني ومجني عليه، مسلم ومسيحي، ونهاية حزينة للأهالي بل مؤسفة للجاني أيضاً ولكل من شارك فيها لأنه يسمى مُغْتصِب.
القانون المصري حدد سن الرشد ب 21 عاماً وفي حالة اختفاء فتاة أكثر من 18 عاما وأقل من سن الـ 21 يُعاقب الجاني إذا اغتصب فتاة.. وقد يُسمى أحياناً اغتصاب فتاة قاصر برضاها والحكم هنا بين خمس أعوام إلى 18 عاماً سجن، وإذا كانت الفتاة أقل من 18 يعاقب الجانيبمؤبد أو إعدام... هذا طبقا للقانون.
What Had Never Been Said In Saudi Arabia. A First For Tauran
By Sandro Magister
Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, president of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue, has been in the capital of Saudi Arabia since April 13, and will stay there until April 20, thereby repaying the visit made to the Vatican on September 20, 2017, by the secretary general of the Muslim World League, the sheikh Muhammad bin Abdul Karim Al-Issa.
Welcomed by Prince Muhammad bin Abdurrahman bin Abdulaziz, vice-governor of Riyadh, Cardinal Tauran gave at the headquarters of the Muslim League, during his meeting with the sheikh Al-Issa, an address without precedent in the history of relations between Christianity and Islam, not because of the things that were said but because of the place where they were pronounced.
The U.S. military remains mired in countless wars in the Greater Middle East. Ironically – and tragically – it tends to combat Islamists that Washington either armed or birthed.
We, Americans, truly are a strange lot. Our government in Washington – ostensibly representative of "We the People" – speaks of peace, but wages endless war, prattles on about "freedom," but backs absolute monarchs and authoritarian strongmen the world over. A bipartisan array of politicians warns of the evils of radical Islamic (though Islamist is more accurate) terrorism; and yet, truthfully, the US once supported and/or funded those same extremists not too long ago. In some cases, and certain circumstances, it backs them still; until, that is, all those guns are turned on the US military, or those fighters threaten Washington’s (ever shifting) "interests."
Police outside the supermarket in Trèbes, southern France. An armed man initially took eight people hostage. Photograph: AP
An undated picture of Radouane Lakdim. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images
A gendarme who exchanged himself for a hostage during the French supermarket siege has died, bringing the number of victims to four. Police shot dead the attacker after a series of attacks claimed by Islamic State in Carcassonne, southern France, that culminated in the three-hour hostage-taking.
Mass inside the Arch Angel Michael Cathedral Asyut, EgyptRFI/ Pedro Costa Gomes
As Egypt's elections kick off on Monday 26 March for the next three days, Rfi goes to the southern city of Asyut, which has one of the largest Coptic populations in the country, to see if efforts by President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi have been effective in ensuring the safety of the Copts after recent terrorist attacks. Photos by Pedro Costas Gomes.
Egyptian expats participation in presidential elections is historic: Copts for the Homeland
Hend El-Behary
The participation of Egyptians inside and outside the country is a national duty
The president of the General Union of ‘Copts for the Homeland’ Karim Kamal said that the participation of Egyptian expats in the 2018 presidential elections is ‘historic’ and the scene of voters lining up in queues will be recorded in history.
Kamal praised the participation of Egyptians in Gulf countries and the United States saying that the number exceeded all the expectations.