• About Us
  • Sign In
  • Sign Up
  • Monday 20 May 2013
  • Mobile
  • News
    • Top stories
    • News features
    • News interviews
    • In photos
    • Media features
    • Local press review
  • Opinion
  • Economy
    • Economy news
    • Economy features
    • Economy interviews
  • Environment
    • Environment features
    • Environment news
  • World
    • World features
    • World news
  • Culture
    • Art
    • Book
    • History
    • Cinema
  • Life Style
    • Food
    • Health
    • Society
    • Fashion
    • Parenting
    • Architecture Interiors
    • Travel features
    • Hotels
    • Transportations
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Cartoon
Mohamed Hossam Eddin

 

Printer-friendly versionSend to friend

Contributions

  • Photo
  • Video

Photo

  • A Libyan woman after casting her ballot at a polling station,Tripoli, 7 July 2012. Libyans began voting in their first free national election in 60 years on Saturday, a poll designed to shake off the legacy of Muammar Gaddafi but which risks being hijacked by autonomy demands in the east and unrest in the desert south. Voters will choose a 200-member assembly which will elect a prime minister and cabinet before laying the ground for full parliamentary elections next year under a new constitution.
    Libya's First Elections after Gadhafi
  • Libya women line up to cast their ballots at a polling station,Tripoli, 7 July 2012. Libyans began voting in their first free national election in 60 years on Saturday, a poll designed to shake off the legacy of Muammar Gaddafi but which risks being hijacked by autonomy demands in the east and unrest in the desert south. Voters will choose a 200-member assembly which will elect a prime minister and cabinet before laying the ground for full parliamentary elections next year under a new constitution.
    Libya's First Elections after Gadhafi
  • Egypt's Islamist President-elect Mohamed Mursi (R) delivers a speech while surrounded by his body guards in Cairo's Tahrir Square, June 29, 2012. Mursi took an informal oath of office on Friday before tens of thousands of supporters in Cairo's Tahrir Square, in a slap at the generals trying to limit his power.
    Morsy delivers speech in Tahrir
  • Tens of thousands of protesters protest in Tahrir Square, Cairo, 19 June 2012, against Constitutional Declaration supplement that would drastically expand the military council's authority and limit the power of the coming president.
    Protests against the military declaration in Tahrir
  • Supporters of the Muslim Brotherhood's presidential candidate Mohamed Morsy hold posters of him as they celebrate at Tahrir square in Cairo June 18, 2012. Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood said on Monday its candidate won the country's first free presidential election, but a sweeping legal manoeuvre overnight by Cairo's military rulers made clear the generals planned to keep control for now. An election committee source told Reuters that Islamist Morsy was comfortably ahead of former air force general Ahmed Shafik with most of the votes tallied. But the count, which would make him the first civilian leader in 60 years, had yet to be officially finalised.
    Morsi' supporters celebrate in Tahrir
  • Protesters react outside the Supreme Constitutional Court in Cairo June 14, 2012. Ex-military officer Ahmed Shafik was given the green light on Thursday to run for president when Egypt's constitutional court ruled against a law that would have thrown him out of the race, judicial sources said.
    Protesters at Supreme Constitutional Court
  • A protester wears Vendetta mask, flashin v sign as he participate in million-man rally of "Justice" in Tahrir Square, Cairo, 5 June, 2012, demanding the retrial of deposed President Hosni Mubarak and the other defendants in the case of protester murders during the 2011 revolution, and the application of the Political Isolation Law on presidential candidate Ahmed Shafiq, Mubarak’s last prime minister.
    Million-man rally of Justice in Tahrir
  • Campaign banners for Commander Ahmed Shafiq former Prime Minister, and Dr. Mohamed Morsi former head of FJP, the two Presidential candidates who will compete together in run-off elections, Giza, June 4,2012.
    Campaigning for Shafiq and Morsi
  • Farouk Sultan (R), head of the presidential election commission answers questions from journalists during a news conference in Cairo May 28, 2012. The body overseeing Egypt's presidential election said on Monday the June run-off would pit the Muslim Brotherhood's Mohamed Mursi against Ahmed Shafiq, Hosni Mubarak's last prime minister, confirming the results of last week's first round of voting.
    Presidential Election Commission declaring final results
  • Protesters hold up anti-Marshal and Mubarak portrait as they gathering in Tahrir Square to take part in Friday of Protesting the Revolution, Cairo, April 27, 2012. Muslim Brotherhood and Salafists organized protests to demand hand over of power.
    Protesters in Tahrir Square
  • ‹‹
  • 3 of 34
  • ››
more

Video

Clashes outside Israeli Embassy
Ras Jdir: Haven away from Libya
Ras Jdir: Haven away from Libya
Libyan protesters burn 'The Green Book'
Hawass: Darkness saved The Egyptian Museum
Samalout train shooting
Shaalan back after Poppy Flower
Washington calls for fair elections in Egypt
Saad Ibrahim back in Cairo
  • 1
  • 2
  • next ›
  • last »
 
  • www.egyptindependent.com
  • News

    Top stories News features Media features Local press review
  • Economy

    Economy news Economy features Economy interviews
  • World

    World features World news
  • Environment

    Environment features Environment news
  • Culture

    Art Book History Cinema Cairo Cinema Alex Cinema Cairo performance Alex performance
  • Life Style

    Food Travel features Health Society Fashion Parenting Architecture Interiors Hotels Transportations
  • RSS
  • FACEBOOK
  • TWITTER
  • NEWSLETTER
  • MOBILE
  • APP
  • FEEDBACK
  • CALL CENTER
  • About Egypt Independent
  • Advertise with us
  • Corrections
  • Copyrights
  • Publishing policy
  • Contact us
All rights reserved. Al-Masry Al-Youm.
×