#Ihab Badawi
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goalhofer · 5 months ago
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2024 olympics Egypt roster
Archery
Youssof Fahmy-Tolba (Cairo)
Jana Ali (Giza)
Athletics
Mohamed Khalifa (Cairo)
Mostafa Hassan (Cairo)
Mostafa El Gamel (Giza)
Ihab Abdelrahman (Kafr Saqr)
Moustafa Mahmoud (Cairo)
Esraa Owis (Cairo)
Boxing
Omar Elawady (Mina Said)
Abdelrahman Oraby (Cairo)
Yomna Ayyad (Damietta)
Canoeing
Samaa Ahmed (Giza)
Cycling
Youssef Abouelhassan (Cairo)
Ebtissam Ahmed-Mohamed (Suez)
Diving
Mohamed Farouk (Cairo)
Ramez Sobhy (Cairo)
Malak Tawfik (Cairo)
Maha Amer (Cairo)
Equestrian
Nayel Nassar (San Diego County, California)
Fencing
Mohammed Yasseen (Tanta)
Mahmoud Mohsen (Cairo)
Mahmoud El-Sayed (Tanta)
Abdelrahman Tolba (Alexandria)
Adham Moataz (Giza)
Yassin Khodir (Cairo)
Mohamed Saleh (Cairo)
Alaaeldin Abouelkassem (Alexandria)
Mohamed Hamza (Houston, Texas)
Ziad El-Sissy (Alexandria)
Mohamed Amer (Cairo)
Nardin Ehab (Alexandria)
Aya Hussein (Cairo)
Shirwit Gaber (Alexandria)
Sara Amr-Hossny (Brooklyn, New York)
Malak Hamza (Cairo)
Yara El-Sharkawy (Cairo)
Nada Hafez (Cairo)
Gymnastics
Omar Mohamed (Alexandria)
Lamar Behairi (Cairo)
Jana Mahmoud (Giza)
Aliaa Saleh (Cairo)
Johara Eldeeb (Cairo)
Farida Hussein (Cairo)
Abeer Ramadan (Giza)
Ameena Sobeih (Cairo)
Malak Hamza (Cairo)
Handball
Mohamed Elmessiry (Cairo)
Mohab Abdelhak (Cairo)
Mohamed Aly (Cairo)
Yahia Omar (Giza)
Abdelrahman Abdou (Giza)
Ahmed El-Sayed (Cairo)
Ibrahim El-Masry (Cairo)
Omar El-Wakil (Cairo)
Yehia El-Deraa (Cairo)
Seif El-Deraa (Cairo)
Akram Saad (Cairo)
Ahmed Mesilhy (Cairo)
Karim Handawy (Cairo)
Ali Al-Hawwari (Abu Mina)
Mohammad Sanad (Cairo)
Judo
Youssry Samy (Sharkia)
Abdelrahman Abdelghany (Cairo)
Pentathlon
Mohanad Shaban (Cairo)
Ahmed El-Gendy (Cairo)
Malak Ismail (Cairo)
Salma Abdelmaksoud (Cairo)
Rowing
Ahmed Abdelaal (Giza)
Mohamed Kota (Mina Said)
Abdelkhalek El-Banna (Tanta)
Sailing
Aly Badawy (Alexandria)
Khouloud Mansy (Alexandria)
Shooting
Ibrahim Korayiem (Cairo)
Mohamed Abdelkader (Cairo)
Omar Mohamed (Alexandria)
Omar Ibrahim (Cairo)
Azmy Mehelba (Alexandria)
Remas Khalil (Cairo)
Mai Elsayed-Abuqarn (Cairo)
Nour Abbas-Mohammed (Cairo)
Amira Aboushokka (Cairo)
Hala El-Gohari (El Qanah)
Maggy Ashwamy (Cairo)
Soccer
Ahmed Atef (Cairo)
Mohamed Tarek (Cairo)
Ali El Gabry (Cairo)
Hamza Hussein (Cairo)
Omar El Rakhawy (Monufia)
Amed Gadelhaq (Fayoum)
Hassam Abdelsalam (Cairo)
Mohamed Mahmoud (Cairo)
Mahmoud Hassan (Uktubar)
Ziad Zeyada (Domyat)
Osama Eltraawy (Damietta)
Ibrahim Hassan (Mina Said)
Mostafa Ahmed (Cairo)
Ahmed Abdelaal (Cairo)
Karim Hassan (Shibin El Qanater)
Ahmed Sayed (Minya)
Mohamed Elneny (El Mahalla El Kubra)
Bilal Abdelgalil (Châteauroux, France)
Mohamed Abdelsalam (Cairo)
Swimming
Marwan Elkamesh (Alexandria)
Nadine Barsoum (Cairo)
Farida Abdelbary (Cairo)
Mariam Ahmed (Cairo)
Amina Elfeky (Cairo)
Salma Marei (Cairo)
Sondos Mohamed (Cairo)
Nihal Saafan (Cairo)
Hanna Heikal (Cairo)
Lojine Abdalla-Salah (Giza)
Table tennis
Mohamed El-Beiali (Dakahlia)
Youssef Abdel-Aziz (Cairo)
Omar Assar (Desouk)
Mariam Alhodaby (Cairo)
Dina Meshref (Cairo)
Hana Goda (Cairo)
Taekwondo
Ahmed Nassar (Cairo)
Seif Eissa (Cairo)
Aya Shehata (Alexandria)
Tennis
Mayar Abdel-Aziz (Cairo)
Volleyball
Ahmed Abdelrahman (Cairo)
Mohamed Elhaddad (Damietta)
Abdelrahman Eissa (Cairo)
Mohamed Asran (Giza)
Seifeldin Aly (Giza)
Abdelrahman Seoudy (Cairo)
Mostafa Abdelsalam-Abdelmoaty (Cairo)
Mohamed Issa (Alexandria)
Mohamed Hassan (Cairo)
Mohamed Masoud (Alexandria)
Hossam Abdalla (Cairo)
Reda Haikal (Cairo)
Marwa Abdelhady (Cairo)
Doaa Elghobashy (Beheira)
Weightlifting
Karim Abokahla (Dakahlia)
Abdelrahman El-Sayed (Cairo)
Halima Abbas (Alexandria)
Neama Said (Ismailia)
Sara Ahmed (Al-Huaniya)
Wrestling
Mostafa El-Ders (Monofiya)
Moamen Mohamed (Cairo)
Mahmoud Abdelrahman (Kalyobiya)
Mohamed Gabr (Cairo)
Gamal Mohamed (Cairo)
Amr Hussen (Cairo)
Diaaeldin Gouda (Cairo)
Mohamed El-Sayed (Alexandria)
Mohamed Metwally (Cairo)
Abdellatif Mohamed (Dakahlia)
Nada Mohamed (Corsier-Sur-Vevey, Switzerland)
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lavotha · 6 years ago
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Unveiling masterpieces over 25 centuries
The monumental Egyptian exhibition The Gold of the Pharaohs, was inaugurated at the Grimaldi Forum (GF) in Monaco on July 6, 2018 in the evening, in the presence of H.S.H. Prince Albert II of Monaco, exposing 25 centuries of goldsmith trade in ancient Egypt, gathering 150 masterpieces from the Egyptian Museum presenting a series of prestigious ensembles discovered in the royal and princely tombs of the pharaohs of Egypt. The exhibition is open to the public from today July 7 until September 9, 2018, under the auspices of H.S.H. Prince Albert II of Monaco and the Egyptian government. Ten years earlier the GF featured the exhibition “Queens of Egypt,” that was highly successful.
Egyptian authorities gave a brief presentation to the Media earlier in the morning before a private tour conducted by the exhibition’s curator Christiane Ziegler.
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(Photo: Sylvie Biancheri (GFM), Sahar Talaat Mostafa, Ihab Badawi, Khaled El-Enany, Rania Al-Mashat, Osama Heikal, Christiane Ziegler @CelinaLafuentedeLavotha)
Khaled El-Enany, Egypt’s Minister of Antiquities from 2001, spoke about his plans to enhance Egypt’s heritage profile, and this exhibition in Monaco proves his commitment on that direction. El-Enany completed his doctorate in Egyptology in 2001 at Montpellier III University in France, writing about ancient Egyptian royal names. Also present was Osama Heikal, Head of Parliament’s Media, Culture and Antiquities Committee. 
Sahar Talaat Mostafa, chairperson of the tourism and aviation committee of parliament in Egypt, said that the coming period will witness the development of the legal and legislative framework that will add more structure to the tourism sector, done in cooperation with the government and the private sector. Ihab Badawi, Ambassador of Egypt to France and permanent delegate to the UNESCO, supports cooperation between Egyptian and French and Monaco authorities, in the fields of protecting world cultural heritage and boosting cultural relations. Alumna Rania Al-Mashat, newly appointed Minister of Tourism, is the first woman to hold this position since the ministry was established more than five decades ago. This new title suits the young and successful Egyptian leader, who has always emphasized being driven by a sense of responsibility to serve her country.  “Every international and domestic post or recognition along my career path better equips me to competently serve my country,” said Al-Mashat. “That’s my lifelong goal.”
The curator for this exhibition is no other than the celebrated Christiane Ziegler, Honorary director of the Department of Egyptian Antiquities of the Louvre Museum, Director also for the publication of the archeological Mission of the same museum in Saqqara, Egypt, and President of the Archeology Center in Memphite.
The creative scenography developed by the Grimaldi Forum staff, successfully recreates the ambiance of the ancient Egyptian tombs, with wall-to-wall carpeting that really brings to mind the desert and gives the impression of walking on sand, plus the use of intense  blue. “This color was excessively used by the ancient Egyptians in everything they used to create. I was pretty much keen on making all the exhibition’s visitors feel that they are inside a real ancient Egyptian tomb,”said William Chatelain who visited Egypt to get ideas for the scenography.
(Photo: William Chatelain exhibition scenographer & guide Cecilia Auber during the Press visit @CelinaLafuentedeLavotha)
Highlights of the exhibition
An Egyptian Eldorado – The myth of the Egyptian Eldorado goes very far back in time. The deserts surrounding the Nile valley were rich in minerals and precious stones highly prized for their vivid colors, the blue of lapis lazuli, the green of Sinai turquoise, the blood-red of cornelian, with gold deposits far richer than those of neighboring countries, others arrived by commercial routes.
Furthermore, with the establishment of the Egyptian empire, the pharaoh charged heavy tributes that engrossed the royal treasure and those of the grand temples, in particular the temple Amon in Karnak that received annually 250kg of gold to the temple under the reign of Thoutmosis III.
Pharaohs were the king or queen of Egypt. Most Pharaohs were male, but some famous pharaohs were female, such as Nefertiti and Cleopatra. A Pharaoh was the most important and powerful person in the kingdom. He or She was the head of the government and high priest of every temple. The people of Egypt considered the Paraoh to be half-human, half-god.
An area in Egypt has all the markings of a real Eldorado. It is located between the Nile and the Red Sea and has been named the “Golden Triangle” due to its somewhat triangular shape and development potential.
Goldsmith techniques – For the first time an exhibition is committed to presenting the jewels fabrication stages and techniques used by the Egyptian casters, goldsmiths and jewelers.  The craftsmen organized themselves in workshops in the pharaoh’s palace, residences of princes and governors, as well as in the temples, in a complex ranking system. In the tombs they depict the delivery of precious metals, the weighing, different stages of the creation process and presentation of the finished items. Their professional secrets were passed from father to son or master to apprentice.
Instruments for fabrication of jewels using precious stones @CelilnaLafuentedeLavotha
Bracelet on behalf of Chechonq 1er., Cairo Egyptian Museum @CelinaLafuentedeLavotha
Artesans depiction @CelinaLafuentedeLavotha
Carnelian or chalcedony, a Quartz variety, Mineralogy Museum in Paris @CelinaLafuentedeLavotha
Copper @CelinaLafuentedeLavotha
Lapis-lazuli, Minerology Museum in Paris Tech. @CelinaLafuentedeLavotha
The jewelers’ art reached its zenith during the Middle Kingdom with a style of infinite elegance and perfection. The New Kingdom allowed for more elaborate decoration, while the Third Kingdom period was known by its return to the simplicity of earlier times.
The ransacking of the tombs – For the first time ever, this exhibition unveils and documents the pillage of the royal tombs to get hold of the gold of the dead, since ancient times probably dating back when the practice of burying the dead began, that explains why very few treasures are still available.  A 6min long animated film specially produced for this exhibition is based on fact: the grave-robbing case during the reign of Ramses IX and the transfer of royal mummies to more securely hidden tombs. (Photo: Papyrus journal describin the robberies and ttrials of the accused @CelinaLafuentedeLavotha)
The jewelry that embellished the bodies of the living also was offered to the gods in lavish quantities and buried with them in their tombs. These luxury items were evident coder markers of identity revealing the user’s social role and tell the story of the upper class. For the ancient Egyptians metals and precious stones were divine emanations with magical powers, specially gold known as “the flesh of the gods”, reason why it was used in abundance for burial masks and royal sarcophagi that raised the owner to divine status, preserved his body and enabled his rebirth. The use of gold fingerstalls or sandals on mummies was believed to restore the deceased’s use of his hands or ability to move about. To no surprise organized robberies were common as people wanted to get hold of those luxury items accumulated in the great pyramid and the tombs in the sacred site of the Valley of the Kings.
The chronological itinerary of the exhibition in images
Ancient Kingdom(circa 2700-2200) – The ensemble belongs to Kehops mother Hetepheres, discovered by Americans in 1926 in Giza, including sumptuous jewelry. From this same period is an emblematic statue of King Mykerinos, surrounded by statues of high society members wearing their jewels, plus other statues that illustrate daily life. At that time the dead were surrounded by servants who would assist them in the other life like they had done during their life on Earth.
King Sesostris 1er, XII dynasty, Egyptian Museum Cairo @CelinaLafuentedeLavotha
La dame Hekenou, Known to the king, beginning of V2 dynasty, Cairo Egyptian Museum @CelinaLafuentedeLavotha
Stele du roi Qaa, 1st dynasty, Cairo Egyptian Museum @CelinaLafuentedeLavotha
Middle Kingdom (circa 2033-1710 BC) – At the end of the 6thdynasty Egypt entered the First Intermediate period, a phase not known as conductive to creative activity, characterized by social unrest and foreign incursions. Towards 2030 BC it was reunified by Mentuhotep and there followed the Middle Kingdom considered in art and literature as Egypt’s Classical Age.  There is a beautiful statue of King Sesotris 1sst that marks the entrance to this period. Several bracelets were recovered from their tombs. The jewelry from this period correspond to our contemporary taste characterized by delicacy, purity of lines and sobriety.
View of one of the rooms dedicated to the Middle Kingdom @CelinaLafuentedeLavotha
Grand Necklace of princess Ita-ouret in gold, coraline, lapis-laxuli and amazonite, Egyptian Museum Cairo @CelinaLafuentedeLavotha
Grand Necklace of Princess khenemet, XII dynasty, Egyptian Museum Cairo @CelinaLafuentedeLavotha
New Kingdom (circa 1550-1069) – In the New Kingdom Egypt reaches its zenith, with a politic of conquering towards the south, the Nubian desert of Sudan and the Middle East.  It is a time of extraordinary wealth as the victorious sovereigns send the tributes to the pharaohs, such as horses but most of all precious metals.
Sculpture of Ramses II, XIX dinasty, Kingdom of Ramses II (2)@CelinaLafuentedeLavotha
View of sarcophage in gold @CelinaLafuentedeLavotha
Third Intermediate Period (circa 1075-664) – The treasures of the pharaohs of the third intermediate period were discovered in their tombs located in the delta in Tanis. There are relatively modest, not comparable to the Valley of the Kings.  The more prestigious tomb was that of King of Psousennes, and exhibition of the funeral mask of King Psousennes 1er, that is no other than the second Egyptian royal mask after the one of Toutankhamon.
Gold Mask Pharaoh Psousennes 1er, Tanis XXI dynasty @CelinaLafuentedeLavotha
Five gold covers protecting the toes of the mummy of Pharaoh Psousennes 1er @CelinaLafuentedeLavotha
Practical information
Space Ravel Grimaldi Forum, 10 Avenue Princess Grace, Monaco
Site:www.grimaldiforum.com
Dates: July 7 to September 9, 2018
Times: Open everyday from 10:00 to 20:00 & Thursdays till 22:00
Today’s Quote
“When we look back at the Mayans or ancient Egypt, we look at their art.” Robert Wilson
Spectacular Egyptian exhibition The Gold of the Pharaohs inaugurated in Monaco Unveiling masterpieces over 25 centuries The monumental Egyptian exhibition The Gold of the Pharaohs, was inaugurated at the Grimaldi Forum (GF) in Monaco on July 6, 2018 in the evening, in the presence of H.S.H.
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orthotv · 3 years ago
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🌏Ortho TV Global Presents:  Free Open Scientific Day
🌏Ortho TV Global Presents:  Free Open Scientific Day International Trainee Education Meeting (ITEM) of Limb Reconstruction Surgery: Professional Diploma
⭐Friday, August 20, 2021 - at 1.30 PM IST (10 AM Cairo Time)
🔅Live streaming on Ortho TV: https://bit.ly/LRSPD-ASAMI-India-2
🌟ASAMI INDIA, TEM LRS Board, UK & Egypt WOC Chapters & Ortho TV
Dr Ashraf Khanfour, Dr Hisham El-Ashry, Dr Mohamed Laklouk, Dr Ibrahim Abou Omira, Ms. Deepa Bose Dr Mohamed Fadel, Dr Khalid Emarah, Dr Ihab Badawy, Dr Milind Chaudhary, Dr Rajat Agrawal, Dr Ravi Chauhan, Dr  Shamsul Hoda
🔸 Part I: LRS Board Lecture • Prof. Dr. Ashraf Khanfour Topic: Blount’s disease – an up-to-date insight with contemporary treatment guidelines
🔸Part II: Chairman of World Orthopedic Concern (WOC) UK • Ms. Deepa Bose Topic: Orthoplastic management of bone infection
🔸 Part III: ASAMI India Session: ABCDS for Limb Reconstruction after Osteomyelitis; Plating assisted fixator in Compound fracture Tibia
🔸Part IV: LRS & Chairman of (WOC) Egypt • Prof. Dr. Mohamed Fadel LRS.PD Program Director. Topic: Orthoplastic Ilizarov Assisted Technique in Open Fracture
⚜️Collaboration with: LRS.PD, ASAMI India, World Association against Infection in Orthopaedics and Trauma, Chicago Lower Extermity Surgical Foundation, American Microsurgical Orthoplastic Society, Arab Insitute for Continuing Professional Development, Wolrd Orthopaedic Concern, Cairo Orthoplastic Society, ASAMI Arab
♦️Streaming Live on OrthoTV Global
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goalhofer · 3 years ago
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2020 Olympics Egypt Roster
Boxing
Abdelrahman Oraby-Abdelgawwad (Cairo)
Yousry Hafez (Cairo)
Diving
Mohab El-Kordy (Cairo)
Maha Gouda (Alexandria)
Fencing
Mohamed El-Sayed (Cairo)
Alaaeldin Abouelkassem (Alexandria)
Mohamed Hamza (Cairo)
Mohamed Hassan (St. Louis, Missouri)
Youssef Musa (Cairo)
Mohamed Amer (Cairo)
Ziad El-Sissy (Alexandria)
Mohab Samer (Cairo)
Medhat Moataz-Bahgat (Cairo)
Nada Hafez (Cairo)
Yara El-Sharkawy (Cairo)
Noha Hussain (Cairo)
Noura Mohamed (Cairo)
Mariam El-Zoheiry (Cairo)
Gymnastics
Omar Mohamed-Fathy (Alexandria)
Seif Sherif (Giza)
Nancy Mohamed-Taman (Alexandria)
Login Elsaysyed (Alexandria)
Polina Fouda (Cairo)
Habiba Marzouk (Cairo)
Salma Saleh (Cairo)
Malak Selim (Giza)
Tia Sobhy (Giza)
Zeina Ibrahim-Sharaf (Alexandria)
Mandy Mohamed (Haarlemmermeer, The Netherlands)
Malak Hamza (Giza)
Karate
Ali El-Sawy (Cairo)
Abdalla Abdelaziz (Cairo)
Giana Mohamed-Farouk (Cairo)
Radwa Sayed (Cairo)
Feryal Abdelaziz (Cairo)
Pentathlon
Ahmed Hamed (Cairo)
Ahmed El-Gendy (Cairo)
Haydy Morsy (Dakahlia)
Amira Kandil (Cairo)
Swimming
Marwan El-Kamash (Alexandria)
Ali Khalafalla (Cairo)
Youssef Ramadan (Cairo)
Farida Osman (Cairo)
Nora Nabilazmy (Cairo)
Farida Radwan (Cairo)
Hanna Hiekal (Cairo)
Laila Mohsen (Cairo)
Maryam Maghraby (Cairo)
Sahd Samer (Cairo)
Nehal Saafan (Cairo)
Jayda Sharaf (Cairo)
Taekwondo
Abdelrahman Wael (Cairo)
Seif Eissa (Cairo)
Nour Abdelsalam (Cairo)
Hedaya Malak-Wahba (Cairo)
Tennis
Mohamed Safwat (Cairo)
Mayar Abdel-Aziz (Cairo)
Wrestling
Amr Hussen (Cairo)
Mohamed Metwally (Cairo)
Diaaeldin Abdelmotaleb (Suez)
Haithem Mahmoud (Cairo)
Mohamed El-Sayed (Cairo)
Abdellatif Mohamed (Cairo)
Enas Mostafa (Alexandria)
Samar Hamza (Faiyum)
Archery
Youssof Tolba (Cairo)
Amal Adam (Cairo)
Athletics
Ihab Abdelrahman (Kafr Saqr)
Mostafa El Gamel (Giza)
Mostafa Hassan (Cairo)
Mohamed Hamza-Khalif (Cairo)
Badminton
Adham Elgamal (Cairo)
Doha Hany-Mostafa (Cairo)
Hadia Hosny-El Said (Cairo)
Canoeing
Momen Mahran (Cairo)
Samaa Ahmed (Cairo)
Cycling
Ebtissam Mohamed (Dubai, U.A.E.)
Equestrian
Mohamed Talaat (Cairo)
Nayel Nassar (San Diego, California)
Abdel-Qader Saïd (Alexandria)
Mouda Zeyada (Alexandria)
Soccer
Mohamed El Shenawy-Gomaa (El Hamool)
Amar Hamdi (Cairo)
Karim Mahmoud (Giza)
Osama Galal-Toeima (Tanta)
Mohamed Salam (Cairo)
Ahmed Hegazy (Ismailia)
Salah Shalaby (Zagazig)
Nasser Maher-Abdelhamid (Mansoura)
Taher Mohamed-Mahmoud (Cairo)
Ramadan Sobhi-Ahmed (Cairo)
Ibrahim Abel (Mina Said)
Akram Elhagrasi (Kafr Saqr)
Karim El Eraki (Mina Said)
Ahmed Rayyan (Cairo)
Emam Ashour (El Mahalla El Kubra)
Mahmoud Gad (El Senbellawein)
Ahmed Mohamed (Cairo)
Mahmoud Hamdy-Attia (Cairo)
Ahmed El Fotouh-Mohamed (Cairo)
Nasser El Sayed (Cairo)
Mohamed Daader (Suez)
Handball
Yahia Omar (Giza)
Ahmed Hesham-Mohamed (Suez)
Ibrahim El-Masry (Cairo)
Wisam Nawar (Cairo)
Omar El-Wakil (Cairo)
Yehia El-Deraa (Cairo)
Hassan Kaddah (Cairo)
Seif El-Deraa (Cairo)
Ahmed El Ahmar (Giza)
Ahmed Mesilhy (Giza)
Karim Handawy (Cairo)
Mohamed Shebib (Cairo)
Ali Mohamed (Abu Dhabi, U.A.E.)
Mohammad Sanad (Cairo)
Mohamed El-Tayar (Riyadh, Saudi Arabia)
Judo
Mohamed Abdelmawgoud (Alexandria)
Mohamed Abdelaal (Cairo)
Ramadan Darwish (Tanta)
Rowing
Abdelkhalek El-Banna (Tanta)
Sailing
Aly Badawy (Alexandria)
Khouloud Mansy (Alexandria)
Shooting
Samy Razek (Cairo)
Osama El-Saeid (Cairo)
Mostafa Hamdy (Cairo)
Youssef Makkar (Cairo)
Abdel-Aziz Mehelba (Alexandria)
Azmy Mehelba (Alexandria)
Ahmed Zaher (Cairo)
Radwa Abdel-Latif (Cairo)
Maggy Ashmawy (Cairo)
Hala El-Gohari (Ismailia)
Alzahraa Shaban (Cairo)
Table Tennis
Omar Assar (Desouk)
Ahmed Saleh (Giza)
Khalid Assar (Desouk)
Yousra Abdel-Razek (Cairo)
Dina Meshref (Cairo)
Farah Abdelaziz (Cairo)
Triathlon
Basmla Elsalamoney (Gharbia)
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