Sunday February 12, 2012

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Past Event

A Foreign Policy, Saban Center for Middle East Policy and U.S. Relations with the Islamic World Event

How Egypt’s Changing Media Landscape is Influencing Domestic Politics

Egypt, Middle East, Africa, Democracy Assistance, Media & Journalism

Event Summary

Media in Egypt has long been under tight government control. Over the past decade, however, the landscape has been changing rapidly with the arrival first of private satellite television, then independent and non-partisan newspapers, and finally, the internet and new media. Despite vigorous and determined suppression, it has become increasingly difficult to stem the growing tide of free speech. The result has been a surge of political activism, fueled to a great extent by both access to information and the ability to disseminate it.

Event Information

When

Wednesday, May 06, 2009
12:30 PM to 2:00 PM

Where

Somers Room
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC
Map

Event Materials

Contact: Saban Center for Middle East Policy

Email: SabanCenter@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6048

The Saban Center at Brookings’ Project on U.S. Relations with the Islamic World was pleased to host Ford Foundation Visiting Fellow Mirette F. Mabrouk to talk about the changing landscape of Arab media, and its effect on Egyptian domestic politics. Mirette Mabrouk is editor-at-large with the American University in Cairo Press, founding publisher of The Daily News Egypt, and a frequent commentator in the Arab press.

Transcript

MIRETTE MABROUK: There are two things. I don’t really think that it’s any secret that U.S. foreign policy over the past eight years has been at probably an unprecedented low. It is not possible for public opinion of U.S. foreign policy to dip much further than it has.
But again, you want to bear something in mind. People like to make the cliché between U.S. foreign policy and the American people.

Secondly, however, there is a limit as to how much you can lambaste the Americans on television, because the Americans are allies; okay? Egypt is Syria’s ally in the region. The Americans are allies. And if you value your time, you do not spend too much time slamming allies, because then the government becomes guilty by association.


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