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  2. Sada El-Balad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sada_El-Balad

    Sada El-Balad. Sada El-Balad (Arabic: صدى البلد, lit. "Nation's Echo") is an Egyptian news website and satellite television channel established in 2011. It is owned by businessman Mohamed M. Abou El Enein [1] and features journalist Ahmed Sabry as its founding Editor-in-Chief. [2]

  3. Al-Balad (newspaper) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Balad_(newspaper)

    Sister newspapers. Baladna (Syria) Website. www.albaladonline.com. Al-Balad (Arabic: البلد, lit. 'The Country') officially Sada Al-Balad (Arabic: صدى البلد, lit. 'The Echo of the Country') was an Arabic-language daily newspaper in Lebanon. [1] It was headquartered in Beirut [2] and was published as a tabloid commercial paper.

  4. List of newspapers in Egypt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_newspapers_in_Egypt

    There were also 65 newspapers published in languages other than Arabic, [1] such as Turkish, French and English. [2] By 1951 Arabic language newspapers numbered to about 400, while 150 were published in other languages. [1] By 2011, daily newspaper circulation in Egypt increased to more than 4.3 million copies. [3]

  5. Ahmed Mussa (presenter) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ahmed_Mussa_(presenter)

    Marwan, Mennat Allah. Ahmed Mussa (Arabic: أحمد موسى; born 10 September 1961), an Egyptian journalist and TV presenter. [2] He also works for Sada El-Balad channel and presents political programs. [3][4][5] A political community on instagram added him to a group and there were leaked messages of him swapping insults with Ahmed Samy, an ...

  6. Alaa Thabet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alaa_Thabet

    After graduating, he worked as a journalist for Al-Nour newspaper in 1988. He was a journalist for Al-Watan newspaper in Cairo in 1989 and a journalist for the Cairo bureau in 1990. He was a journalist and education correspondent for the Gulf newspaper of Kuwait and Al-Qabas in 1991. He was a journalist in 1991, and was a participant in the ...

  7. Category:Newspapers published in Cairo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Newspapers...

    Al Maarif. Al-Malayin. Al-Masry Al-Youm. Al Messa. Al Misri. Mizan (Ottoman newspaper) Al-Mu'ayyad (newspaper) Al Muqattam.

  8. Al-Ahram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Ahram

    Al-Ahram. Al-Ahram (Arabic: الأهرام; lit. 'The Pyramids'), founded on 5 August 1876, is the most widely circulating Egyptian daily newspaper, and the second oldest after Al-Waqa'i' al-Misriyya (The Egyptian Events, founded 1828). [2] It is majority owned by the Egyptian government, and is considered a newspaper of record for Egypt.

  9. Downtown Cairo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Downtown_Cairo

    Talaat Harb Square, the heart of Downtown Cairo Shurbagi building. Downtown Cairo (Egyptian Arabic: وسط البلد Wust al-Balad, "middle of town") is the colloquial name given to the 19th-century western expansion of Egypt's capital Cairo, between the historic medieval Cairo, and the Nile, which became the commercial center of the city during the 20th century. [1]