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Egypt Agog as Hijab Debuts on State TV

Muslim Brotherhood seen as flexing muscle over secular state media

By Mark Russell,  Newser Staff

Posted Sep 3, 2012 8:56 AM CDT

(Newser) – A female news anchor on one of Egypt's state-run television stations read the news yesterday while wearing a hijab, a first after a decades-long de facto ban on the Islamic head covering, reports the New York Times. While veiled women are common on many of Egypt's satellite and cable channels, the country's official secularism had kept the hijab off of state-run stations. Its presence yesterday had the country debating heatedly whether it was a sign that the Muslim Brotherhood was moving toward a more Islamist Egypt.

Anchor Fatma Nabil had worked at the Muslim Brotherhood's satellite channel, but started at Channel 1 over the weekend. The new minister of information said her wearing of the hijab represented the “enforcement of the principle of justice in the field of media." State media had for years supported the military government, and since the election of Islamist President Mohamed Morsi, often seemed to continue to favor the military over the Brotherhood. But since Morsi forced top military brass to retire last month, many think the presence of Nabil and other veiled women is a sign the Brotherhood is flexing its muscle over Egypt's media.

Fatma Nabil, shown here from anchoring the news on Misr 25, has started working for Channel 1, marking the first time a woman hearing a hajib has anchored the news on state-run television.
Fatma Nabil, shown here from anchoring the news on Misr 25, has started working for Channel 1, marking the first time a woman hearing a hajib has anchored the news on state-run television.   (misr25channel)
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COMMENTS
Showing 3 of 47 comments
JanetInSC
Sep 3, 2012 10:55 PM CDT
Please stop commenting on the woman's looks...don't you see how that is just as ignorant and oppressive as being forced to cover her hair?  Geez, guys, she has a pretty face, just a somber expression. Must women ALWAYS be judged by their looks? 
HANKHILL
Sep 3, 2012 8:05 PM CDT
not good! should have covered her face! better!
Sphinx
Sep 3, 2012 1:57 PM CDT
Under Mubarak, women who wore hijab were not ALLOWED on state TV. Under Morsi, they are. I don't see any religious oppression here. I don't see any fundamentalism. I see people being allowed to do their job, dressed the way that they want.  I know for a lot of people in the west, it's a knee-jerk reaction to equate more clothes with more oppression, but that is simply not the reality for most Middle Eastern women. About 70 percent of Egyptian women cover their hair. Preventing women wearing hijab from appearing on TV was discrimination. This IS a step forward.
 

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