Tag: Pharaohs

  • FIFA Best Award Fall Out: Egypt Names Salah Pharaohs’ Captain

     

    Egypt may have moved swiftly to placate Liverpool forward Mohamed Salah by naming him Captain of the Pharaohs on Tuesday.

    The Egypt international recently frowned at a major slip on the part of the Egyptian Football Association (EFA) after the Association failed to submit the coach and captain votes for the FIFA Best Player award that was won by Lionel Messi.

    Both had voted for Salah, though it would not have guaranteed him victory, he nonetheless viewed it as a flop on the part of EFA.

    Egypt Coach Hossam El Badry named Mo Salah as the new captain of The Pharaohs on Tuesday. El Badry announced that Salah would take over from Aston Villa defender Ahmed Elmohamady, who led the team to round of 16 exit at the last Nations Cup which the country incidentally hosted, after losing by a lone goal to Bafana Bafana of South Africa.

    Pharaohs’ coach Hossam-El-Badry

    Some officials were reportedly jolted when Salah who has netted 58 goals in 81 appearances for Liverpool and 41 goals in 67 appearances for the Pharaohs change his Twitter bio to read only ‘Footballer for Liverpool FC’ having removed any references to the Egypt national team.

    Salah has been called into camp for the October FIFA International window, where the team will host Botswana in a low-key friendly in Cairo on October 14.

    The former Chelsea and Roma ace is adored in his country to the point that about one million electorates cast their votes for him in the last presidential  election in Egypt even when he never showed any interest either in belonging to a political party or contesting for elective office.

     

  • Behold Egypt’s modern Pharaohs

    Behold Egypt’s modern Pharaohs

    In this documentary film titled Egypt’s Modern Pharaohs written by an Egyptian, Jihan el Tahri which was shown at the IREP Documentary Film Festival in Lagos last week, attention was drawn to the Egypt’s turbulent political history from 1952 to 2012.  Edozie Udeze reports.

    Egyptian filmmaker, Jihan el Tahri has always been imbued with the courage of a lioness.  Even as the Freedom Park, Lagos, venue of the IREP Documentary Film Festival bubbled with frenzy, with thousands of people waiting to watch her film titled Egypt’s Modern Pharaohs, she felt unmoved.  Sitting among her friends, she puffed away at her cigarettes as she carefully savoured the euphoria of the Park.  She could only acknowledge banters from here and there as fans and film buffs greeted her from time to time.  “I can only talk to you when the screening is over”, she told this reporter.  “What is it you really want to know?” she asked as an afterthought, looking up from her seat with a disarming smile.  “Just to know about the circumstances that led you into doing this documentary”, was my reply.  “Ok then, no big deal”, she answered.  “We’ll get around to it.”

    This documentary film on the history of modern Egypt is making waves all over the world now.  Titled Egypt’s Modern Pharaohs and divided into three parts; it details the sacking of the last Pharaoh King Farouk in 1952.  Thus began the revolution in which the army has since taken over the political reign in Egypt.  The uprising that sacked Hosni Mubarak began in 2011, it was then that El Tahri who had been in exile for decades due to her first film that troubled the regime of Mubarak, went back home for the first time.  The confusion at home aided her freedom and return.

    “When I got home from South Africa in 2011, my father was troubled.  He was afraid for me and for the family when he said to me, ‘why did you return?  You have already given us enough troubles here.’ Nonetheless, when I got to the Square there was much crowd there.  There was, however, this picture one man was circulating.  I took one from him.  When I got home, I showed it to my father, who then exclaimed, ‘oh this is the picture of Mohammed Naguib’.  Who is he?  I asked him.  He was the first president of Modern Egypt, he said to me”.

    That then set her mind racing, knowing then that Gamal Abdel Nasser (1956 – 1970) was not really the first president after the fall of King Farouk, the last of the ancient Pharaohs in 1952.

    The two hour film properly and painstakingly situates the events in their right perspectives.  Having got her sponsorship from Qatar, el Tahri went to work, to let the world see what intrigues and intricacies that have shaped the Egyptian political terrain since 1952.  The documentary covers a period of 60 years.  From 1952 to 2012, it shows the battle of supremacy and power plays between the modern Pharaohs and the Muslim Brotherhood, a group that has tormented the Egyptian leaders for years.  The Brotherhood has been seen as the alternative government and even some of the presidents courted their friendship, while others tried to suppress their reckless roles in the society.

    The film opened with the chasing away of both the British and French forces from the soil of Egypt.  This was done in 1952 when Mohammed Naguib and Gamal Abdel Nasser took over the armed forces.  Same year, the last vestiges of the Biblical Pharaohs in their large epitome were eliminated from power.  With this, the coast was clear for the revolution to thrive; to see if these new leaders could give the people the respite they needed to have unity, peace and growth.

    The research deliberately paid uncommon attention to the roles played by Naguib to wrestle Egypt from the jaws of the fifth columnists, those who did not want Egypt to make progress.  Due to this, there was constant squabble between Naguib and Nasser who later detained him.  With Naguib under house arrest, Nasser gradually consolidated power, riding on the populist acclaim to hold firm on the people’s hopes and aspirations.

    Now in firm grip of power, he erased every sign of Naguib from the political history and power play of Modern Egypt.  But El Tahri did not forget to remind historians that officially Nasser was known to have ruled Egypt from 1956 to 1970.  However, the revolution began in 1952 and there was a vacuum in leadership.  Who then led the country at that time from 1952 to 1956?  This indeed, is where this documentary clears the air and tried to restore the period in history that belonged to Mohammed Naguib, a gentle man general that bestowed on the people that need to go along with him for a greater tomorrow; a more prosperous and egalitarian Egypt.

    Although Nasser made efforts during his long reign to better the lots of the people, he was noted to have resorted to the tactics and style of the ancient Pharaohs.  Fear and oppression reigned supreme.  People disappeared at every whim.  He opened Egypt to the Arab world and turned to Russia for friendship.  With this assurance, he went to war against Israel in 1967.

    Israel responded quickly and according to the film, within one hour, Israel had finished the whole of Egyptian navy and thus set the country back by many years.  Nasser did not recover from this disgrace and trauma until he died in his sleep in 1970.

    Using commentators in French, Arabic and English, the film elaborated on these various stages when corruption was the hallmark of Egyptian leadership.  Poverty took over the lives of the common people and fear ruled the waves, creating more unrest in all the nooks and cranny of the society.

    In 1970, Anwar el Sadat who was Nasser’s deputy took over.  An army general who did not quite grasp the intricacies of power play before Nasser suddenly died, he inherited a leadership troubled and divided between their love and royalty for the Muslim Brotherhood and the excesses of their modern Pharaohs.  It took Sadat a pretty long time to wrestle power and restore confidence in the system.  In 1973, he mobilised to fight Israel and to take back the Suez Canal seized and occupied in 1952 by Israel.  When this did not work, due to the prompt intervention of Henry Kissinger, the US Secretary of State, Sadat was persuaded to turn to the US for a new political friendship.  Thus, Egypt and Israel signed the famous Camp David Accord, with Sadat paying an official visit to the State of Israel.

    In 1981, Sadat was assassinated by disgruntled members of the Muslim Brotherhood who accused him of drifting politically and religiously.  They needed a society where Islam was given prominence.  To them secularity must be expunged from the Egyptian political constitution.  Jihad must be the necessary recourse.  In the ensuing malady, Hosni Mubarak, Sadat’s deputy took over.  A naturally repressive fellow, he began the longest reign of terror as the worst modern Pharaoh of all times.  From 1981 until 2011 when he was ousted from power in a popular revolt and uprising, Mubarak was everything brutish, highhanded, oppressive and sadistic.  “Yes,” el Tahri replied, “he used the state police to ensure that people disappeared every day.   He ruled for five consecutive times in elections he organized to suit his whims and caprices.

    “This was the moment we, as Egyptians, dreaded most.  There was no strong voice against his government except perhaps the Brotherhood whom he allowed to contest elections individually and as independent candidates.  In 2011, at 82 years, Mubarak still wanted to contest for the 6th time.  This was when the trouble began for him.  He also wanted his son Gamal to succeed him.  The people said no.  This is not a monarchy.  This is not a new form of ancient Pharaohs.  Besides, Gamal possessed no political experience.  He was not a soldier and soldiers would never tolerate or accept him,” el Tahri said.

    And so in January, 2011, the people marched to the Central Square in Cairo, following in the footsteps of the Arab Spring that had already started in Tunisia.

     

    The interregnum

    What formed the major highlights of the documentary were the events that shaped the Egyptian history for 60 years.  Apart from the period of June 2012 to July 2013 when Mohammed Morsi was president, Egypt has been in the strong grips of army generals.  It has become next to impossible for a civilian to rule and hold that nation together.  The army has come to occupy and they have so much tasted power that they cannot relinquish it.  They feel that Egypt would disintegrate, losing its secularity to the fundamentalists if it falls into the hands of civilians.

    And so in 2013 once more, an army general Abdel Fattah el-Sisi took over.  It is part of the moves to save Egypt from chaos.  But the truth is that at every point in the political history of Egypt uneasy calm has remained the worth of the people.  All their leaders have come to resemble Egypt’s Biblical Pharaohs known for their obnoxious ways of leadership.  The centralized form of governance still prevails, with corruption at its highest level, while the state security apparatuses hang on the necks of the people. Turbulence reigns supreme.  Fear grips everyone here and there.  The documentary is so expository that it grips you.

    It makes you harbour unbridled and deep sympathy for Egypt, this cradle of world civilization.  The cult of personality of leadership, the intimidations that orchestrate leadership are still there, with poverty at its very peak.  But when will this deep culture of bad leadership even end, not only in Egypt but in the whole of Africa?  That is the lesson for all in the two–hour documentary.

  • Can Pharaohs cage  Lions in Gabon?

    Can Pharaohs cage Lions in Gabon?

     

     

     

    Can Pharaohs caged Lions in Gabon on Sunday in the African cup of Nations final? That is definitely the question on the lips of soccer fans across the continent.

    The Egyptians, proud seven time winners of the continental diadem are seeking their eight victory while their Cameroonian counterparts with four titles in the kitty are hoping to win their fifth title and by so doing be in a class of their own as they are at the moment tied with Ghana at four trophies in the kitty, one ahead of Nigeria that failed to get a place in Gabon.

    The Pharaohs have not managed to qualify for the event for over three editions, and it is interesting that in all the years of their absence no country has managed to catch up with their 7-time winning record.

    The Lions on the other hand were even surprise qualifiers after facing a lot of player withdrawals managing to qualify for first final since 2008 and going in the running for the title since 2002.

    Edging out Ghana in the semifinal was a warning that the Lions have not come to make the numbers and are determined to feature as defending champions when they host the championship in 2019.

    But will they find an easy prey in the Pharaohs who some say have since forgotten what it means to win the trophy after years of absence.

    The team will no doubt be relying on their tested and trusted goalkeeper Essam El-Hadary, the oldest man ever to play in the tournament at 44.

    His super performance in the semifinals against Burkina Fasso   will definitely ring bell in the minds of the Lions who perhaps should be playing to avoid penalty situation which may favour El-Hadary, but that is not to take anything away impressive Lions goalkeeper Fabrice Ondoa.

    Though considered inexperienced considering that he has not been playing regularly prior to the championship, he has so far given a good account of himself and has this courage to go the extra mile.

    Should the Pharaohs emerge champs they would have succeeded in increasing their winning tally and so other African countries will have to continue the chase to meet up with them, and should the Lions emerge victorious, they would have increased their own tally and will have the likes of Ghana with four wins, Nigeria with three wins, Ivory Coast and DR Congo with two wins each doing the catch up game against Cameroon and Egypt respectively.

    Whatever happens on Super Sunday night, the fact remains that Africa and indeed the world will see breath taking encounter that will be full of fireworks and whoever emerges champion will be getting it not on a platter but through hard work. May the best team win!

  • BATTLE AGAINST THE PHARAOHS: Siasia opts for Euro Eagles

    BATTLE AGAINST THE PHARAOHS: Siasia opts for Euro Eagles

    • Shuts door against home-based flops

    Nigeria coach, Samson Siasia has hinted he could consider lining up a team made up of only pros from overseas after he said he was disappointed his home-based team failed to beat a second-tier league side, Katsina United on Thursday.

    Siasia is supervising a training camp of players from the domestic league with the hope of picking some of them to join a 21-man squad of foreign pros called up for the AFCON double header against Egypt later this month.

    However, the outspoken coach said he was again far from impressed with the performance of the home-based team as well as the goalless draw with Katsina United.

    He had previously expressed his displeasure with the performance of the team after they lost 2-0 to the country’s Olympic team on Wednesday.

    “I am not really happy that they couldn’t create enough chances to beat a team like Katsina United. It is rather unfortunate,” said Siasia after the scoreless draw with Katsina United.

    “By now I am supposed to have seen some wonderful displays from my boys. What worries me is their nonchalant attitude in front of goal. They find it difficult to create scoring chances and even the few ones created were fluffed.

    “We can’t be missing goals like this in a crucial match against Egypt. I will have no option than to rely on the foreign-based players, if the home boys fail to live up to the billings.”

  • Battle of the Pharaohs Cuper storms Kaduna with 11-man backroom staff

    Battle of the Pharaohs Cuper storms Kaduna with 11-man backroom staff

    To underline the seriousness they have attached to the 2017 AFCON qualifiers against the Super Eagles of Nigeria,  the Head Coach of the Pharaohs of Egypt, Hector Cuper will be leading an 11-man backroom staff to Kaduna.

    Those expected to arrive in Nigeria to give the necessary technical and other forms of support to Cuper include assistant coach, Osama Nabih, 1st Assistant coach, José Fantaguzzi, Goalkeeping coach Ahmed Nagy, Team director  Ehab Leheta, Analyst and Assistant Coach  Mahmoud Fayez, Physical trainer Antonio Sarioglou, Team doctor  Mahmoud Abou El Ela, Masseur Badr Hamed ,Physiotherapist Hossam El Ibrashy, Kit manager  Abdullah El Sayed ,Media officer Mostafa Tantawi.

    Already, the Egyptian delegation has planned to arrive in Kaduna by chartered flight on March 22, three days before the game scheduled for the Ahmadu Bello stadium, Kaduna.

    The team will gather in Alexandria, where they will go to Cairo and then connect a chartered flight to Nigeria. The second of the double header holds on March 29 in Alexandria.