Displaying 11 - 20 of 95.
After getting a verdict of separation from her Christian husband, 'Abīr Tal'at Fakhrī's [allegedly kidnaped by the church] lawyer filed a new report with the Public prosecutor accusing the priest of of Saint Mina Church in Imbābah of kidnapping her and keeping her in a house attached to the church...
 Al-Giza criminal court decided with regards to the first trial of 48 defendants in Imbābah incidents to postponed the trial to September 4, 2011. Muslim and Christian defendants were separated in the dock, and the trial was under tight security measures. Only 26 defendants were in the trial,...
Under tight security measures, al-Giza criminal court held its first trial for 85 suspects in the Imbābah church incident, accused of gathering, malicious meditated and attempted murder, jeopardizing general security, sedition-mongering, intentionally setting the church on fire, and possession of...
 'Abīr Tal'at Fakhrī, an Imbābah sedition-monger, was sentenced to three to seven years in prison for three accusations: adultery for having relations with someone other than her husband, fraud for claiming to be unmarried when in fact she was, and sparking fitnah in Imbābah.  
The Quwaysnā Family Court in the governorate of al-Minoufiya handed down a final sentence separating 'Abīr Tal'at Fakhrī, the woman who started the sectarian unrest in the impoverished Giza district of Imbābah, from her Christian husband Ayman Jamāl Fathī Fahmī. The court issued the ruling due to...
After a court released the woman who sparked the Imbābah fitnah, 'Abīr Fakhrī, she was again referred to Quwaysnā police department then to al-Qanātir prison.
Counselor Hishām Badawī, First Attorney General for the Supreme State Security Prosecution, ordered on Tuesday (June 21, 2011) the release of 'Abīr Fakhrī, the woman who sparked the sectarian unrest in the impoverished district of Imbābah. Security authorities had arrested Fakhrī, who was referred...
Less than 30 days after the incident of fitnah in Imbābah, a new fitnah looked as though it would be sparked when a Muslim young-woman disappeared with a Christian young-man, announced his conversion to Islam to marry her, then they traveled to Alexandria after getting married. Clashes between...
Peter Ramsīs, the lawyer in the Imbābah, incidents stated that the following individuals have been acquitted in Imbābah's incidents on June 3, 2011. They are accused of illegitimate gathering, meditated murder, possessing firearms, and robbery.  
  A group of Coptic youth has threatened to resume their sit-in at the state media building if the ruling military council fails to meet their demands by July 8, according to Ahrām Online.      

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