Trends in Egyptian terrorism in the post-Mubarak period
Al-Naggar, Abdallah Abdel-Ati
Prantner, Zoltán
2024-02-27T07:55:44Z
2024-02-27T07:55:44Z
2024-02-18
2786-1902
hu_HU
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14044/25473
Egypt has experienced a distinct wave of terrorism since the early 1980s. An analysis of trends shows that the intensity of political violence and armed clashes has increased significantly since the ousting of President Mohamed Morsi on 3 July 2013. Terrorist acts have since spread from the Sinai Peninsula to mainland Egypt, where the perpetrators have includedreligious fundamentalists and marginalised Bedouin groups in society, as well as increasing numbers of political opponents of the Sisi regime. However, the use of extremist means to gain religious, ideological, and political legitimacy has provoked an increasingly violent response from the Cairo leadership, which has launched several large-scale operations to dismantle terrorist bases in the country. Although the clashes have claimed the lives of thousands of soldiers, police and civilians, the fight is far from over.In the present study, the authors outline the demographic background and social problems of Egypt's modern history of terrorism, in an attempt to give a sense of the trends. Their overall conclusion is that, despite the Egyptian government's propaganda announcements, the large-scale action of the security forces has not been able to completely eradicate the presence of fundamentalists in the country but has been able to significantly reduce their operational capabilities in the region.
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Trends in Egyptian terrorism in the post-Mubarak period
hu_HU
Open access
hu_HU
Óbudai Egyetem
hu_HU
Budapest
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Bánki Donát Gépész és Biztonságtechnikai Mérnöki Kar
hu_HU
Óbudai Egyetem
hu_HU
Társadalomtudományok - hadtudományok
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Abdel Fattah el-Sisi
hu_HU
Egypt
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muslim brotherhood
hu_HU
Mohamed Morsi
hu_HU
terrorism
hu_HU
Tudományos cikk
hu_HU
Journal of Central and Eastern European African Studies