Supervisor Elham AbolFateh
Editor in Chief Mohamed Wadie

Ragheb Alama Shows Support to Egyptian People - (Video)


Fri 20 Sep 2019 | 03:40 PM
Nawal Sayed

Lebanese superstar Ragheb Alama was seen in a video recording supporting the Egyptian government and people. The video was widely circulated on social media platforms on Friday.

“I’m Ragheb Alama, I’m a Lebanese national and Arab. But I believe that Egypt my home,” he said in the video.

He added that he supports Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah El Sisi, government and people.

[video width="300" height="400" mp4="https://see.news/images/2019/09/Ragheb-Alama-Video.mp4"][/video]

“May God Bless Egypt,” the Lebanese singer noted.

SEE could not verify the exact date of the video’s shooting.

The video is circulated on Twitter in a company of a trending hashtag saying “We Are With You Sisi”.

There were some calls on social media networks for protests in Egypt on Friday. The calls were launched by pro-Muslim Brotherhood group.

Ragheb Alama Video Timing 

The banned MB group was categorized as a terrorist group by Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Syria and other world countries.

In exclusive remarks to SEE, Egyptian politician Tarek Radwan said that there will be no protests in Egypt today, Friday.

"All the traitors had already fled the country," he said

Radwan, who leads the African Affairs Committee at House of Representatives, added to SEE that he does not expect serious response to the protests’ calls that some pro-Muslim Brotherhood group have called for.

“Egypt is bigger than this nonsense,” Radwan added.

He stressed that the Egyptians would not be affected by “such calls”, noting that “traitors living in exile cannot influence people toppled tyrants in June 30 Revolution.”

“The Egyptian will was stolen in 2011 and the people’s revolution was kidnapped, but this does not change the fact that Egyptians won’t give up,” the parliamentarian asserted.

When Egyptians chanted “bread, freedom, and social justice,” the main demands of the January 25 revolution in 2011, they thought their demands would be easily met by the Muslim Brotherhood group which “stole the revolution from the youth” as observers described then. However, the three demands were not met by the first elected administration of the MB, which is currently outlawed in Egypt and other Arab countries.

https://see.news/egyptians-will-was-stolen-once-such-move-not-allowed-to-happen-mp/