The Daily News Egypt

Op-ed review: Al-Sisi’s Q&A’s at World Youth Forum

- By Amira El-Fekki

As the state-sponsored World Youth Forum held in Sharm El-Sheikh came to an end, a focus on questions asked by attendees throughout the event to President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi and his answers to them topped op-eds in Wednesday’s newspapers.

In state-owned media Al-Ahram, each writer picked up a topic. Salah Montasser chose the question on Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi’s murder, to which Al-Sisi responded by warning from jumping to conclusion­s as long as official investigat­ions are in process.

Al-Ahram’s Makram Mohamed Ahmed described questions addressed to Al-Sisi as “tough,” praising the president’ s “honesty and transparen­cy .” Ahmed dedicated most of his piece to the WYF session on Africa, and plans of flourishin­g the continent under Egypt’s upcoming presidency of the African Union.

For Al-Ahram’s Ahmed Abdel Tawab, Al-Sisi’s most important statements were those reinforcin­g religious freedoms, in the writer’s opinion. However, he pointed out that freedom of belief is not guaranteed by some constituti­onal articles, including one which only recognises the rights of Abrahamic religions and another which placed Al-Azhar as the reference for Islamic affairs, which Abdel Tawab argued gave the institutio­n’s men authority to have larger interferen­ce with religious matters.

This came as Karam Gabr in state daily Al-Akhbar selected Al-Sisi’s expression “national suicide,” which the writer considered a descriptio­n of a “catastroph­ic situation” of Arabic countries after the “Arab hell revolution­s” – in reference to the Arab Spring. He highlighte­d the different wars in the region between traditiona­l armies and terrorist groups, concluding that national affiliatio­n should be highly promoted in Egypt.

In the private Al-Youm Al-Sabea newspaper, Hazem Salah El-Din focused on Al-Sisi’s talk about social media’s negative effects.The writer said the most dangerous side of social media misuse was the spread of rumours, and how the technologi­cal developmen­t became a weapon used against the country, and a communicat­ion platform for planning terrorist operations.

For his part, Emad El-Din Hussein, editor-in-chief of the privately-owned Al-Shorouk emphasised the question on the NGOs law, in a piece where he argued that a woman’s question to Al-Sisi on reconsider­ing the law succeeded in what foreign government­s and local politician­s failed to do.

 ??  ?? President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi
President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi

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