Al-Ahram Weekly Online   16 - 22 June 2005
Issue No. 747
Front Page
 
Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875

Sixty articles more
Despite opposition attacks the People's Assembly will today pass a law regulating Egypt's first ever presidential elections, reports Gamal Essam El-Din
Fearing the worst
Israel and the Palestinian occupied territories are witnessing a time of hot diplomacy -- borne of the cold realities of the disengagement plan, writes Graham Usher in Jerusalem
In the running
Iran is embroiled in presidential campaigning and constitutional debate, writes Mustafa El-Labbad from Tehran
Debates and dilemmas
Even as Saddam's trial commences, Iraq's Sunni community does not believe it is time to bury the hatchet, reports Nermeen Al-Mufti from Baghdad
Reform dynamics
Hopes for democratic reform in Syria may have been put on hold, but they are not dead, writes Sami Moubayed from Damascus, as he also profiles the great survivor of Syrian politics Abdel-Halim Khaddam who finally stepped down this week
Expats told to wait
Egyptian expatriates will most likely not have a say in the country's first multi-candidate presidential elections. Mohamed El-Sayed gauges reactions and finds out why
Feminist priorities
Dina Ezzat and Amany Abdel-Moneim look into the increasing gap between the agendas of governmental and non-governmental women's rights groups
Privatise the unions
Trade union activists have lent their voices to growing demands for democratic reform, reports Faiza Rady
Aoun's hour
Enter Michel Aoun. Omayma Abdel-Latif reports from the Lebanese capital on the implications for Lebanese politics
Yesterday's men and tomorrow's
The battle for creating a new Sudan is tight and peace talks are a travesty of democracy, writes Gamal Nkrumah
Comment: Iraq's sectarian myth
The sectarian forces drafting the new Iraqi constitution do not reflect grassroots sentiment, writes Hana Al-Bayaty
Putting taxes to the test
Amidst a hearty welcome from society, experts remain sceptical about the new tax law. Sherine Nasr reports
Safety in numbers
Leaders of developing countries converge on Doha to discuss economic development, writes Gamal Nkrumah
Debates and dilemmas
Even as Saddam's trial commences, Iraq's Sunni community does not believe it is time to bury the hatchet, reports Nermeen Al-Mufti from Baghdad
Lebanon

The plight of hundreds of thousands of Palestinian refugees in Lebanon received negligible attention in the course of the country's heated electoral battle...
--caption--

 

The economics of reform
Ibrahim Nafie reviews the progress made during the current financial year
Change in Syria?
To what extend has the Syrian Baath Party congress in Damascus changed the political landscape of the Middle East, asks Mohamed Sid-Ahmed
When the French and Dutch say no
Rejection of the European constitution by two of the EU's founding members will not, in the long run, hamper moves towards political unity, argues Hassan Nafaa
The life of Belya
Amin Howeidi ponders the nation's human resources while getting his car fixed
Academic freedom in context
The boycott of Israeli universities remains a moral imperative, write Omar Barghouti and Lisa Taraki
An uncanny resemblance
by Salama A Salama

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