Al-Ahram Weekly Online
1 - 7 August 2002
Issue No. 597
Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875 Current issue | Previous issue | Site map

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Melt-down

The heat, a kite, laundry? Fatemah Farag braves soaring temperatures in search of the reasons behind Cairo's power cuts

OPEN PAGEOpinion

Ibrahim Nafie:
Who are the racists?
Hani Shukrallah:
Nasser and the end of politics
Hassan Nafaa:
Democratic reductionism
Ayman El-Amir:
Time for redemption
Azmi Bishara:
No more heroes

GOLDEN JUBILEE OF THE 1952 REVOLUTION
Speciasl Supplement

Unceasing fire
As bombs and guns once more fire in Jerusalem and the West Bank, Palestinians and some Israelis ponder the cease-fire that might have been, reports Graham Usher from Jerusalem

Summer travel supplementTRAVEL SUPPLEMENT
The heat is on
Do it till you drop
A world of weekends
Tour lines

OPEN PAGEEgypt

Enter the EU
Recent developments have allowed the EU to play a more pronounced role in the peace process. Soha Abdelaty reports

Brotherhood wings clipped
The Supreme Military Court sentenced 16 leading members of the banned Muslim Brotherhood group to prison terms ranging between three and five years. Khaled Dawoud was at Haikstep military camp where the trial was held

'Determined to fight on'
Sociologist Saadeddin Ibrahim's retrial ended with another guilty verdict, and a score of shocked reactions. Jailan Halawi reports

OPEN PAGERegion


Burying the ceasefire

Israel's bombing of Gaza last week not only killed 15 Palestinians. It buried the most serious Palestinian move toward a ceasefire in seven months, say Palestinians. Graham Usher reports from Jerusalem

Bombs and pogroms
In a week that witnessed Israeli settlers go on a rampage in Hebron, killing a young girl and injuring 20 people, Palestinians in Nablus began a tentative collective resistance to the curfew. Khaled Amayreh reports from Hebron

Suffer the little children
Most of the victims of Israel's attack on a residential area in Gaza were children. Taghreed El-Khodary tells the story of seven of the 11 children who lost their lives

Too many cooks
Saber rattling in Washington is bringing to the fore latent differences among Iraqi dissident groups, writes Salah Hemeid

OPEN PAGEInternational

OPEN PAGEEconomy

Somali peace on hold
Factional fighting flared up in war-torn Somalia even as preparations for a Somali national reconciliation conference in Kenya are stalled, writes Gamal Nkrumah

France protests Moussaoui trial
The trial of French national Zacarias Moussaoui, the only person indicted for involvement in last year's 11 September attacks on New York and Washington, begins next month amid disagreement between France and the US over the possible use of the death penalty, writes David Tresilian from Paris

Above the law
Has the US turned its back on international law? Nyier Abdou looks at the Bush administration's aggressive stance on the International Criminal Court


Music to Western ears
The first ever UNDP report on human development in the Arab region lamented the lack of freedom and scientific research in this part of the world. Galal Amin questions the findings

Ali Hassanein
Ali Hassanein:
The coiffeur's ghost
Profile by Youssef Rakha

Restaurant review
Go East!
Injy El-Kashef is turning Japanese

Limelight
By Lubna Abdel-Aziz

OPEN PAGECulture


Next time round

The Bibliotheca Alexandrina's first book fair launches Hala Halim into some bibliophile musings

Patriotic cool

Youssef Rakha enjoys Egypt's first high-tech action flick
L I S T I N G S
>i< An all-inclusive guide to goings on around Cairo >i<

OPEN PAGELiving

OPEN PAGEFeatures


... tied up with string

Is it really the thought that counts? Nesmahar Sayed unwraps the issue

The sting
When summer hits, mosquitoes sting. Amira El-Noshokaty goes out mosquito busting

OPEN PAGETravel

OPEN PAGEHeritage


Anything grows

Winston Churchill once said the Mediterranean coast west of Alexandria had "the best climate in the world". Jenny Jobbins checks out what else makes it so special

Replica royal tombs at Giza
After a decade of discussion, debate and controversy on whether the concept of creating replicas of Egypt's most famous royal tombs in the Valley of the Kings was feasible, a decision has now been taken. Nevine El-Aref attended the symposium in London at which the new Desert Valley Project was lauded

OPEN PAGESports

The price of fame
A shocking decision leaves the Al-Sharqiya Hockey team and its technical manager sidelined from the pitch for the next three years. Abeer Anwar investigates the African Hockey Federation's (AHF) stunning decision

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