1/04/2020

Messiah the Dajjal Antichrist

المسيخ الدجال براعية  الموساد الإسرائيلي، مسخ من كل النصوص الدينية ،استغلال حاجة الشعوب البائسة فى العالم ..

عندما تكون البشرية مستعدة لتصديق اى شئ يظهر مسلسل المسيح المخلص فى بداية عام ٢٠٢٠ ......

تشوية المسلمين اكثر و العرب (كل الممثلين ليسوا عرب)

الهدف من المسلسل خلط الأمر على المسلمين والتشويش على معتقداتهم والتشكيك فيها، حيث يظهر المسيح الدجال على أنه المخلص والمنقذ للاجئين من الحروب بالدول الإسلامية إلى بر الأمان في إسرائيل، في حين يكون "تنظيم الدولة" هو عدو المسيح الذي يحارب رسالته، على حد وصفهم

كما أن الأردن الذي صورت على أراضيه أجزاء كثيرة من المسلسل قد طالب بوقف عرضه أو حتى عدم عرضه جزئيا على منصة الشبكة بالمملكة اعتراضا على أحداثه، وطبقا لجريدة مترو الإنجليزية فإن الأردن وافق على التصوير في البداية لأن السيناريو والخطوط العريضة لم تكن تخالف القوانين، وهو الأمر الذي اتضح أنه غير صحيح لاحقا.


تبدأ الحلقة الأولى من المسلسل من سوريا في الوقت الحالي بمشهد أم مع ابنها "جبريل" يسألها ما إذا كان الرب يحبه، واذا كان يحبه لماذا أخذ والده، لتقول له أن الله يخبأ له خطة أخرى، ثم تقفز الأحداث لمستقبل الطفل - الذي ستكون لديه قصة اخرى لن نخوض فيها في هذه المراجعة - حيث قتلت والدته ايضا اثناء حصار على مدينة دمشق بسوريا من قبل تنظيم داعش على الأهالي، وهنا يظهر شخص يتلو آيات قرآنية بخطاب يحشد فيه الناس ويقول أنهم اكثر الشعوب التي عانت على الأرض وتحتاج أن تعود إلى كلام الله، وأثناء ذلك تهب عاصفة رملية على المدينة تستمر ثلاثين يوما، ويبقى هذا الشخص واقفا في مكانه دون أكل وشرب مستمر بدعوة الناس في وسط العاصفة،  فتنتهي العاصفة بعدما تتسبب في فك الحصار وتراجع قوات داعش.

ثم يبدأ الفتى "جبريل" والأهالي باتباع هذا الرجل الذي يقودهم عبر الصحراء إلى فلسطين، لتقبض عليه القوات الإسرائيلية على الحدود تنخضعه للتحقيق، وتمنع دخول أتباعه، ومن هنا تبدأ قصة المسيح أو "المخلص".


وفي الجانب الأخر، تبدا شكوك لدى الإستخبارات الامريكية حول هذا الشخص ويتساءلون عن جنسيته وطائفته وكذا غايته، واذا كان شيعيا إيرانيا كما توحي لهجته، و كيف له ان يقود مجموعة من السنة عبر الصحراء، فيتم تجنيد محققة شابة اسمها "إيفا" للتحقيق في القضية، وهنا يتجلى أول رد فعل متوقع في وقتنا الحاضر، في حال ظهر رجل مماثل.


بعد إخضاع المسيح للتحقيق واحتجازه من طرف إسرائيل، تحدث المفاجاة حيث يختفي من الغرفة حيث كان محتجزا بشكل غامض وسط ذهول الشرطة الإسرائيلية، لكنه سرعان ما سيظهر في مدينة القدس وتحديدا أمام مسجد قبة الصخر، حيث تحدث معجزة أخرى حينما يصاب طفل برصاص القواة الإسرائيلية فيقوم المسيح بشفائه واخراج الرصاصة من بطنه بلمسة يد فقط، وسط ذهول الناس، في مشهد يحيل مباشرة إلى شخصية "يسوع المسيح"، قبل أن يختفي عن الأنظار، ثم يظهر فجاة في بلدة بولاية تكساس بأمريكا وقت حدوث إعصار دمر البلدة كاملة عدا الكنيسة التي يديرها قس من البلدة سيكون أول من يتبع هذا المسيح بعد مشاهدته للمخلص وسط الاعصار  في وقت كان هو ينجو بنفسه وأهالي البلدة من الاعصار. و شخصية القس لم تظهر هنا عبثا بل كان الغرض منها تمرير رسالة اخرى من رسائل المسلسل الكثيرة حول قضية "تجار الدين" الذين يحاولون التحدث باسم الرب و يقومون باستغلال إيمان الناس لتحقيق مصالحهم الشخصية، ولو ان هذا الطرح لم يظهر بشكل ملموس، لكن يمكن فهمه من خلال الكثير من المشاهد.

بعد هذه الحادثة يتم احجتاز المسيح من قبل الشرطة الامريكية بتهمة دخول الاراضي الامريكية بدون جواز سفر، وهنا يعين القس محامية للدفاع عن المخلص باعتباره لاجئا من سوريا يحق له الحصول على الاقامة في امريكا. فتبدأ هنا معركة قانونية وقضائية وكذا سياسية بين مؤيد ومعارض لقانون الهجرة واللاجئين، لكن في النهاية تنتصر العدالة القضائية فيتم منح المخلص حق اللجوء، وهنا ايضا تتجلى احدى رسائل المسلسل حول العدالة الأمريكية والنظام القضائي المستقل عن كل تأثير، وهناك مشاهد تحيل إلى هذا الطرح، كمشهد اتصال مستشار الرئيس الامريكي بقاضي ولاية تيكساس لمحاولة التاثير عليه.

.......

Al-Masih ad-Dajjal (Arabic: المسيح الدجّال‎ Al-Masīḥ ad-Dajjāl, "the false messiah", or "the deceiver") is an evil figure in Islamic eschatology. He is to appear, pretending to be al-Masih (i.e. the Messiah), before Yawm al-Qiyamah (the Day of Resurrection).


 the Messiah Netflix original series follows CIA officer Eva Geller as she uncovers information about a man who’s gaining attention all over the world because some believe him to be the Messiah. As Eva digs deeper into the origins of Al-Masih and her sole focus becomes determining whether he’s really a divine entity or a con man, his followers claim him to be a miracle worker......

The scandal of “Messiah”—the 10-part Netflix series about a reputed Savior of Mankind arising out of the Middle East—isn’t that its Iranian-born prophet resembles a Western-traditional Jesus. Or that he incites international outrage by leading 2,000 Syrian Palestinians to the border of the West Bank. Or that his pan-religious message of love and godliness is embraced by the spiritually famished. Or even that the principal Israeli in the series is a torturer. No, the outrage is that the show can be so alive for so long and then drop so very dead, apparently of the same self-doubt and cynicism that infect so many of the people it portrays.

When the 2,000 Muslims leave Damascus chanting “al-Masih! “al-Masih!” it is the first of a seemingly miraculous number of fish (as in red herrings) cast in our path by a program that is absolutely enthralling for at least half its lifespan. Al-Masih, after all, means “the anointed” in Arabic. In Islamic eschatology, though, “Al-Masih ad-Dajjal” is analogous to the Antichrist. Figuring out which is which is what obsesses most of the characters, and the viewer, all of whom are cast from the start into a very near, very troubled future.

In a newscast heard over aerial footage of a bombed-out Damascus, we are told that 2019 U.S. foreign policy has resulted in a revitalized Islamic caliphate and chaos throughout the region. Forces of Islamic State are massing on the outskirts of the city; a single figure (Mehdi Dehbi) rallies the beleaguered populace: Trust in God, he tells them. Although he’s denounced by some, and doubted by most, a sandstorm worthy of Cecil B. DeMille rolls across the landscape, forcing the invaders away and saving the city. And throughout the ensuing 30 days of wind and sand—or so the rumor goes—al-Masih doesn’t eat, drink or stop preaching at the Gate of St. Thomas (the Doubter, it should be noted).

Rather than to Damascus, it is toward Israel that al-Masih leads his disciples. They include the urchin Jibril (the heartbreaking Sayyid El Alami), who will follow a path intriguingly parallel to the soon-to-be celebrity al-Masih: The latter may walk on water, but Jibril will walk naked through a phalanx of angry border guards, leading his encamped Syrians into Israel. Which act is more miraculous?

Meanwhile, al-Masih himself has disappeared from the West Bank and materialized in Texas, during a tornado that all but destroys the town of Dilley—the real-life site, no coincidence, of the infamous South Texas Family Residential Center, an immigrant detention facility. The locals are suddenly reduced to the status of weather refugees, but the small whitewashed Baptist church run by Felix Iguero (John Ortiz) is spared. So is Felix’s troubled teenage daughter, Rebecca (Stefania LaVie Owen). Both become acolytes of al-Masih. Mom (Melinda Page Hamilton) prefers to drink heavily.

“Messiah” follows, more or less, the traditional narrative about prophets, false or true, while keeping its audience off balance and considerably mesmerized. Al-Masih, who is ostensibly Muslim but speaks of himself in very opaque, Jesus-quoting terms, never makes any claims about his identity, or who his father is. The claims are imposed upon him by the faithful. He answers questions with questions. (He’s a therapist, basically). He generates love among many.

The opposition to him, and the threats, and the undermining of his cause, if that’s what it is, are the work of people with suspicion in their DNA. They include Eva Geller (Michelle Monaghan), a CIA field officer who sees in al-Masih and his growing following an incipient terrorist threat. Her Israeli counterpart, Aviram Dahan (Tomer Sisley), is an Israeli agent who fears and loathes al-Masih for several reasons—chief among them al-Masih’s uncanny knowledge of war crimes that Aviram has committed during operations in northern Israel.

So much is so right about “Messiah” that it makes the eventual collapse into paranoid politics and alt-right clichés all the more painful. There are few stereotypes among the Texas Christians or the Syrian Muslims; Mr. Ortiz and Ms. Hamilton are particularly fine, and thoroughly convincing, as is Jane Adams as Miriam Keneally, an Amy Goodman-esque journalist who scurries around the rim of the al-Masih story. The remarkable Philip Baker Hall, now 88, has a small but significant role as Eva’s father, which shows once again what a great actor he is, and what a terrible character Eva is.

Ms. Monaghan, left to internalize a lot of Eva’s problems—she’s a widow, doing IVF with her dead husband’s sperm while nurturing a disbelief in anything good—does a lot of acting. Likewise, Mr. Sisley. But “Messiah,” created by Michael Petroni with episodes directed by Kate Woods and James McTeigue, is notably thorough in its research. There are a couple of dramatic accommodations—a district court judge, for instance, wouldn’t decide an asylum case like the one that provides one of the series’ more explosive sequences. But, mostly, it’s a show of high intelligence and dramatic momentum.

The show’s executive producers include “Apprentice” creator Mark Burnett and his wife, Roma Downey, whose work together (such as “The Bible”) has involved conventionally Christian content, a category into which “Messiah” decidedly does not fit. Most of the time, “Messiah” doesn’t fit anywhere—it challenges doubters and believers alike, instills a certain amount of naïve hope in where it’s going, and raises that eternal question, What would the world do if Jesus Christ appeared today? Ultimately, though, the whole show seems to be governed by an Oprah Winfrey quote, scribbled on the wall of the late-night diner where Eva takes her laptop and her misery: “You become what you believe.” By the end of episode 10, you’re not sure that “Messiah” believes in much.

https://twitter.com/MessiahNetflix/status/1201878806669283332?s=19

https://www.aljazeera.net/amp/news/arts/2020/1/2/%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%85%D8%B3%D9%8A%D8%AD-%D9%85%D8%B3%D9%84%D8%B3%D9%84-%D9%85%D8%B3%D9%8A%D8%A1-%D9%84%D8%B5%D9%88%D8%B1%D8%A9-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%A5%D8%B3%D9%84%D8%A7%D9%85-%D9%8A%D9%81%D8%AC%D8%B1-%D8%BA%D8%B6%D8%A8%D8%A7-%D9%81%D9%8A-%D9%88%D8%AC%D9%87-%D9%86%D8%AA%D9%81%D9%84%D9%8A%D9%83%D8%B3

1/01/2020

Happy New Decade! 2020

Happy New Decade! 2020
Another year is upon us and another cultural decade begins. 

11/30/2019

the irishman 2019 Netflix

انت تطلىالمنازل 🙄
فيلم مش غريب على مجموعة العظماء فريق الفيلم تحس انك بتتفرج على جزء من Godfather 
فيلم ٤ ساعات تقريبا الجميل ان كل طقم العباقرة افلام المافيا كلهم فى الفيلم بس الحاجة الوحيدة انة بيعتبر جزاء من العراب بشكل ما فيلم يستحق المشاهدة و من أفضل ١٠ افلام فى ٢٠١٩
جهز اشارك و سناكسك الى ٤ ساعات علشان تسفر الخمسينات ⏳🍿
https://m.imdb.com/title/tt1302006/

5/16/2018

Ramadan Kareem 1439

 To all the Muslims around the globe, Happy Ramadan or as we say in Egypt “Ramadan Kareem”.

Ramadan of Hijri year 1439 will officially commence in Egypt on Thursday. According to calculations, the Holy month will be 29 days.

4/12/2018

The END Of FACEBOOK

The END Of  FACEBOOK

Congress questioned Mark Zuckerberg for 10 hours today. Here's some of the questions they threw at him


Congress questioned Mark Zuckerberg for 10 hours today. Here's some of the questions they threw at him:
Cambridge-Analytica-Congress-Testifying-Mark-Zuckerberg-Internet-Reactions

Cambridge-Analytica-Congress-Testifying-Mark-Zuckerberg-Internet-Reactions












Here are 3 ways Facebook will be affected by the Cambridge Analytica scandal.





11/21/2017

When food is used as a weapon In Yemen

When food is used as a weapon IN Yemen.

WHAT HAPPEN IN YEMEN WILL NOT STAY IN YEMEN  
FOR EVER

 

  
This month Saudi Arabia tightened a stranglehold on the neighboring country of Yemen and 7 million people face starvation. The Saudi blockade is an escalation in Yemen's civil war. The United Nations says the war has now become a "man-made catastrophe." You've seen very little of this because the Saudis prevent reporters from reaching the war zone. Recently, we were ordered off a ship headed to Yemen. Days later the Saudis gave us permission to fly there but, after our equipment was loaded and our boarding passes issued, the Saudis closed the airspace so the plane couldn't take off. Even so, we have managed to get pictures out of Yemen to show you what the Saudi government does not want you to see. This will be hard to watch, but 27 million people in Yemen pray you will not turn away.


yemen-child-3.jpg
A child in Yemen
Hungry children cry. But there are no tears at the limits of starvation. Wasting bodies cannot afford them. This is the Al Sabeen Hospital in the Yemeni city of Sana'a. Ibtisam is two and a half. She weighs 15 pounds. Haifa is seven. She weighs 11 pounds. The images, and stories from the hospital, were sent to us by people that we hired inside Yemen. One child dies every ten minutes in the country according to the U.N..
David Beasley runs the World Food Programme, the U.N.'s emergency first responder to prevent famine.
David Beasley: It's just desperation and death. It is as bad as it gets. I don't know if I've ever seen a movie this bad.
Scott Pelley: We were headed into Yemen with the World Food Programme, the Saudis gave us permission to come, and then when we arrived they wouldn't let us into the country. What do you think they didn't want us to see?
David Beasley: I don't understand why they won't allow the world to see what's taking place. Because I think if the world sees the tragedy of this human sufferin', number one, the world will step up and provide the support financially for innocent children to eat. But when you get on the ground and see what I see, you see is chaos, is starvation, is hunger, and it's unnecessary conflict strictly man-made. All parties involved in this conflict have their hands guilty, the hands are dirty. All parties.



"We're on the brink of famine. If we don't receive the monies that we need in the next few months, I would say 125,000 little girls and boys will die."

In essence, the fight is between the two main branches of Islam. The Shia branch occupies much of the West, the Sunnis most of the South and East. Saudi Arabia, leader of the Sunni world, began airstrikes against Shia rebels, more than two years ago. The rebels, who are known as Houthis, are supported by Saudi Arabia's arch enemy, Iran, the leader of the Shia world.
Houthi rebels have plenty of blood on their hands, including the deaths of 1,000 civilians. But the U.N. says the Saudi coalition has killed more than 3,000 civilians; bombing schools, hospitals and Al Kubra hall, scene of a funeral last year. 132 Civilians were killed, nearly 700 wounded. Still, the deadliest weapon in Yemen is a blockade holding up food, fuel and medical aid.
David Beasley: We can't get our ships in. They get blocked
Scott Pelley: Who blocks the ports?
David Beasley: The Saudi coalition.
David Beasley told us the Saudis bombed the cranes that unload ships. The U.S. sent replacement cranes. But the Saudis won't let them in.
David Beasley: We ask any, any parties engaged in this conflict to respect humanitarian law, respect the rights of innocent people and give us the access that we need to provide the help that's needed.
Scott Pelley: It sounds like the Saudis are using starvation as a weapon.
David Beasley: I don't think there's any question the Saudi-led coalition, along with the Houthis and all of those involved, are using food as a weapon of war. And it's disgraceful.

yemen-child-1.jpg
A child in Yemen
The U.N. World Food Programmer is the largest humanitarian aid agency. The U.S. is its biggest donor, so the director is most often an American. Beasley was once governor of South Carolina.
David Beasley: We're on the brink of famine. If we don't receive the monies that we need in the next few months, I would say 125,000 little girls and boys will die. We've been able to avert famine, but we know three things that are happenin'. We know that people are dying. We know that people are wasting. And we know that children are stunting. We have a stunting rate in Yemen now at almost 50 percent. That means they're smaller, the brains are smaller, the body's smaller because they're not getting the food or the nutrition they need.
The World Food Programme's Stephen Anderson is trying to move millions of pounds of food to Yemen from an African port in Djibouti.
Stephen Anderson: The World Food Programme is mobilizing food for seven million people. Now what that looks like is a 110-pound bag of wheat flour. We're aiming to provide two million of those every month to the people of Yemen.
Scott Pelley: How long can you keep that up?
Stephen Anderson: Well, we're desperately praying for peace. Because that's the only sustainable way of really rebuilding the situation our stated objective is to try to prevent a famine from occurring.

stephen-anderson-in-yemen-food-distribution.jpg
Stephen Anderson distributes food
CBS News
While facing imminent famine, the people of Yemen are also suffering one of the biggest cholera epidemics in history. Nearly a million have been infected with the bacteria which inflicts diarrhea, dehydration and sometimes death. The disease thrives in dirty water. And water treatment and sanitation have collapsed in Yemen's cities.
Nevio Zagaria heads the World Health Organization's emergency response.
Scott Pelley: What do you have to have to stop the epidemic?
Nevio Zagaria: We should have peace. This is what we need to stop this epidemic. So we cannot solve the problem of cholera if we do not have a proper safe water supply, if we do not have proper sanitation. If we do not have the sewage treatment plant in the main town functioning and stop because it runs out of fuel as it happened at the beginning of this epidemic in the north of Sana'a for three or four months.
Scott Pelley: The main sewage plant in Sana'a ran out of fuel and didn't run for three or four months?
Nevio Zagaria: Yes. So 3 million people, huh?
About two million Yemenis have been forced from their homes by the war and there's been a big exodus of refugees that the world doesn't know very much about. Many of them have come 25 miles across the Red Sea to a refugee camp in the African nation of Djibouti. It is a testament to how bad things are in Yemen that the refugees believe that this place is so much better.
We've seen a few refugee camps in our time but this may be the most desolate with a drought of life and flood of sun. One worker told us we were smart to come in fall when it cooled off to 110.

Scott Pelley: How long have you been here?
Ali Shafick: Unfortunately 28 months.
Ali Shafick was once an architect in the Yemeni capital. His home was destroyed. He's alone here. And his despair was almost like madness.
Ali Shafick: To be jobless in this camp is very sad. The time is going slowly, very slowly.
Scott Pelley: The heat must be unbearable.
Ali Shafick: Heat? Yes, boiling. Starting from June, July and August. Three months. You cannot live, you cannot live here, three months. It's impossible to live.
Scott Pelley: And yet you do.
Ali Shafick: I have to be patient. I have to be patient.

djibouti-refugee-camp.jpg
Djibouti refugee camp
CBS News
This mother, Ameena Saleh, told us her family left after Saudi led airstrikes killed more than 70 people in her town.
The planes would fly above us and fire rockets and missiles she told us. At night there was no sleep, they were holding the young ones. She said that her older son was saying 'we are going to die.' She told us we saw people die right in front of us.
Scott Pelley: A little while ago we heard a rumble from the direction of Yemen. That's the bombing, isn't it?
Yes, her husband said, it's near.
Scott Pelley: What do you think when you hear that?
Strong fear, she said. She said the terror is still inside us from the rockets, missiles and planes.
Ayman Gharaibeh runs Yemeni refugee relief for the U.N..
Scott Pelley: What lies ahead for these people, given where we are today?
Ayman Gharaibeh: Remember, the conflict is going into a third year, some people has been displaced for literally three years or going into their third year.  I honestly do not see any silver lining anywhere on the horizon that this is gonna end soon. And I'm afraid the humanitarian situation will continue to deteriorate. And we would go from a displacement to a famine, as happened, to cholera, and God knows what's next.

"All the children are gonna be dead. It's terrible."

The Saudi intervention in Yemen began with the rise of 32-year-old Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, he's the son of the king and he's the defense minister. Salman is quickly reforming the kingdom's fundamentalist society. Recently, he lifted the ban on women drivers. This month, he arrested 200 Saudis including princes and media owners. He says it's a crackdown on corruption. His critics believe he's silencing his rivals. Salman's campaign in Yemen has now landed Saudi Arabia, for the first time, on the U.N.'s blacklist of nations that disregard the safety of children in war.
The Saudis have pledged $8 billion in humanitarian aid for Yemen, but they've delivered very little of that. The head of the Saudi humanitarian agency says that its aid to Yemen is, quote, "way beyond any damage caused by any attacks."

Scott Pelley: You met with some government officials involved in all of this, what kind of dialogue did you have with them?
David Beasley: Well we met with officials on all sides. They said all the right things. And we come back, everything that they agreed to on visas and access, so that we can get the equipment we need in, so we can deliver the food where we need to deliver it, and the technology and the health product -- you know -- terrible. The conditions are deteriorating in an unprecedented way and none of the commitments that were made, by any and all sides, have been fulfilled.
Scott Pelley: What future do you see for Yemen?
David Beasley: I don't see a light at the end of this tunnel. There's gotta be a big change. As the World Food Program, I've got my mandate to feed people. But also as a U.N. leader, I call upon the leaders of the world to bring the pressure to bear whatever's necessary to get the Saudi-led coalition, the Houthis and all involved to the table and end this thing. You keep goin' like you're goin', there's not gonna be anybody left. All the children are gonna be dead. It's terrible.
Produced by Nicole Young and Katie Kerbstat

60 Minutes, barred from Yemen,still got the footage





https://www.cbsnews.com/news/60-minutes-barred-from-yemen-still-got-the-footage/ 

11/20/2017

Ben Tzion who posted pictures From HOLY Medin in NEW Saudi Arabia

WELCOME TO OUR JEWISH ZIONISTS COUSINS TO YOUR OLD LAND SAUDI ARABIA 
🔯




Ben Tzion blogger who posted pictures from Medina.

saying it's proof of normalization between Israel and Saudi

blogger who posted pictures from Medina, saying it's proof of normalization between Israel and Saudi

WELCOME TO OUR JEWISH COUSINS TO YOUR OLD LAND SAUDI ARABIA 
 http://blogs.timesofisrael.com/author/ben-tzion

https://www.facebook.com/tzionben

http://www.jewishpress.com/author/ben-tzionspitz/
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11/18/2017

UK judge bans mother from taking daughter to Egypt ... because FGM



UK judge bans mother from taking daughter to Egypt ... because FGM

The father viewed FGM as part of "Egyptian culture and tradition."
 

 
Source: YouTube

A British-Muslim mother was recently banned from traveling to Egypt with her baby daughter, over fears that her one-year-old child might be subjected to female genital mutilation.



The mother converted to Islam after meeting her husband, an Egyptian national, in his native country. She planned to take her newborn baby to the North African country to see her father and his family.
However, UK Judge Justice Allison Russell issued a Female Genital Mutilation Protection Order, effectively banning the mother from traveling outside the UK with her daughter until 2032. She ordered that the child's passport be retained by the court till then.
Russell said the father viewed FGM as part of "Egyptian culture and tradition," according to The Daily Mail. Despite the fact that he also believes the procedure should be legalized, the father said that he does not intend to subject his daughter to the procedure.
"It is not intended that the girl should not be able to see her father or members of the paternal family and the court would encourage the father and his family to visit her in England," Russell added.

Egypt Female Genital Mutilation Worse Than Ever Despite Ban

 

 

FGM is a criminal offense in the UK, however it is a common practice in Egypt

FGM, which is defined as a "partial or total removal of external genitalia or other injury to the female genital organs for non-medical reasons" by the World Health Organization (WHO), is extremely common in Egypt.
According to a 2014 survey, 92 percent of Egyptian women aged between 15 and 49 have been circumcised.
This can lead to worrisome side effects, including severe physical pain, bleeding, and the risk of wound infections.
The practice has also been revealed to cause a delay in women's sexual response cycle.
Earlier this year, the spokesperson of Egypt's primary Forensic Medicine Department, Dr. Hesham Abdel Hamid, revealed that 70 to 80 percent of all Egyptian women cannot orgasm due to the practice.