Cairo (Earth Times) - The head of Egypt's upper house of parliament refused to consider a plan to change the country's flag to include the Giza Pyramids, a government daily reported on Tuesday. Lawmaker Hussein Abdel-Samei had on Monday suggested placing an image of the three pyramids at Giza at the center of Egypt's flag, to replace the current flag's golden eagle holding a shield emblazoned with the words "Arab Republic of Egypt," Cairo's al-Gomhuriya newspaper reported.
Shooting down the proposal, Safwat al-Sharif, head of the Shura Council, said that Egypt was not a Pharaonic country, but instead rooted in the Pharaonic, Coptic Christian, and Islamic eras.
Al-Sarif said that Egypt's flag represented its struggle during a period of its history. The Egyptian flag consists of the Pan-Arab red, white and black stripes taken from the flag of the 1916-1918 Arab revolt against Ottoman rule.
Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Syria, the United Arab Emirates, Yemen, and the Palestinian Authority all use variants of that flag.
Shooting down the proposal, Safwat al-Sharif, head of the Shura Council, said that Egypt was not a Pharaonic country, but instead rooted in the Pharaonic, Coptic Christian, and Islamic eras.
Al-Sarif said that Egypt's flag represented its struggle during a period of its history. The Egyptian flag consists of the Pan-Arab red, white and black stripes taken from the flag of the 1916-1918 Arab revolt against Ottoman rule.
Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Syria, the United Arab Emirates, Yemen, and the Palestinian Authority all use variants of that flag.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.