Monday, January 28, 2013

Egyptian Corporate Lawyer: Egypt's President Morsi Declares Emergency and Cur...

Egyptian Corporate Lawyer: Egypt's President Morsi Declares Emergency and Cur...: " Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi has declared a state of emergency in the cities of Port Said, Suez and Ismalia after days of deadly unr...

Egypt's President Morsi Declares Emergency and Curfew

"Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi has declared a state of emergency in the cities of Port Said, Suez and Ismalia after days of deadly unrest.
A daily curfew from 21:00 to 06:00 will be imposed for 30 days from Monday, he said in a speech to the nation.
At least 33 people died over the weekend in Port Said, where a court judgment sparked rioting.
In Cairo, anti-government protesters clashed with security forces near Tahrir Square for a fourth consecutive day.
The BBC's Aleem Maqbool, in Cairo, says the "tough speech" was in response to days of violence" quoted from the BBC.
Again the Egyptian Presidency uses forces to resolve political conflicts instead of finding political compromise.
The political unrest is caused by the new constitution which has been passed without reaching a public agreement on it. The Egyptian Church together with the liberals are among the opposition to such constitution.
Further, the Altras and Black Block (a group of Al Ahly the football club's fans) are also very angry from the murder of over 20 of their members in a football match in Port Said.
What is needed from the presidency is a condemnation of any violence from all parts, including the Police and the Muslim Brothers, the other islamists and the liberals. An invitation to all parties to sit on a negotiation round table to figure out what all the parties agree on, an leave the disagreements  to a later stage, in order to unite the people from the current division in Egypt between Islamist and Liberals.
It is obvious that the stage in Egypt now is been set for a civil war, that in my view, the Egyptian people is wise and exhausted to fall into. We are also worried from putting pressure on the Egyptian Government to engage into a war in Syria and Egypt Government accept just to attract the attention for the internal instability to an exterior danger which is a classical policy that governments sometimes use when they are unable to resolve the interior conflicts.
From all the above we notice the unstable and unpredictable future that awaits Egypt, in the coming months or years, which may be settled by national dialogue, production and economic re engineering, and by spreading a culture of moderation and tolerance.


Mohamed E. Shaheen

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Egyptian Corporate Lawyer: Lawyers Vacancies

Egyptian Corporate Lawyer: Lawyers Vacancies: Two firms in Egypt and Dubai are seeking Senior Associate/Partner level Arbitration lawyers to join their respective teams. The firm in Qat...

Lawyers Vacancies

Two firms in Egypt and Dubai are seeking Senior Associate/Partner level Arbitration lawyers to join their respective teams.

The firm in Qatar seek to fill a Junior Associate position; the criteria is : Oxbridge 2:1 minimum candidate 3-7 years PQE, up to £80,000 package free of tax.

If either of these roles would be of interest to you or someone you know please do not hesitate to contact me by reply or pass on this message.

Friday, January 4, 2013

Egyptian Corporate Lawyer: 5 in New Delhi Rape Case Face Murder Charges - NYT...

Egyptian Corporate Lawyer: 5 in New Delhi Rape Case Face Murder Charges - NYT...: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/04/world/asia/murder-charges-filed-against-5-men-in-india-gang-rape.html Char...

5 in New Delhi Rape Case Face Murder Charges - NYTimes.com


Charges Filed Against 5 Over Rape In New Delhi

NEW DELHI — Rape, murder and other charges were filed on Thursday against five men suspected of carrying out the gang rape of a 23-year-old physiotherapy student who later died of her injuries in a case that has prompted outrage and protests across India.

A court official announced that beyond rape and murder, the charges include destruction of evidence and the attempted murder of the woman's companion, a list of crimes that could result in the rare imposition of the death penalty. A court official said the charges would be made public on Saturday. A sixth suspect is a juvenile, and his case will be handled separately for now.

The case against the five men will be referred almost immediately to a new fast-track court set up in recent days to handle cases involving crimes against women, officials said. That court is expected to hold a trial soon in stark contrast to the apathy and years of delay that Indian rape victims often face when seeking justice.

The five are accused of luring the woman and her friend onto a bus in South Delhi, beating them and abusing her so brutally with a metal rod during the rape that she sustained fatal internal injuries. The woman clung to life for two weeks but died Saturday in a Singapore hospital, where she had been transferred for special care.

Gang rapes have become common in India, a country that some surveys suggest has one of the highest rates of sexual violence in the world. Rape complaints increased 25 percent between 2006 and 2011, although it is impossible to know whether this represents a real increase in crime or simply an increased willingness by victims to file charges and by the police to accept them.

But something about the recent crime caught the public's attention. Among the reasons could be the randomness of the crime (most rape victims know their abusers), its brutality and the sympathetic profile of the victim.

The outpouring of anger at the crime caught the government by surprise, and there has been widespread criticism of its aggressive response to protesters, which included tear gas, water cannons and beatings by truncheon-wielding riot police officers. The government invoked a terrorism law that prohibits even small gatherings, and it closed a huge portion of the capital to vehicular and pedestrian traffic.

The government's reaction fed longtime criticism that India's police are too often used to guard the powerful from the people rather than to protect the people from predators. India's police are generally poorly trained, deeply corrupt and often viewed by women as predators rather than protectors.

The case has also led to a continuing discussion about the conflict between the aspirations of India's rising middle class and a deeply conservative and patriarchal culture that views the recent educational and economic successes of Indian women with unease and even alarm.

Kishwar Desai, an author, wrote an opinion article in The Indian Express on Thursday that said the gang rape illustrated to some that "a certain class of men is deeply uncomfortable with women displaying their independence, receiving education and joining the work force. The gang rape becomes a form of subduing the women, collectively, and establishing their male superiority."

Because of the intense interest prompted by the case, a crowd of television cameras and reporters jostled inside and outside of the courthouse for much of Thursday. And with officials refusing to provide routine information about whether the suspects would arrive at the courthouse, rumors about the day's events ricocheted around the media scrum like a drop of water on a hot frying pan.

Niharika Mandhana contributed reporting.

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: January 3, 2013

Because of an editing error, an earlier version of this article erroneously reported that the charges had been filed earlier on Thursday.