In a paradox in which some of the pioneers of social networking sites in Egypt stopped, President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi attacked the late President Mohamed Morsi during his speech yesterday, but unusually during the era of Sisi, Morsi's name was not deleted from the website of the President of the Republic that Sisi announced and celebrated.

During his speech marking the seventh anniversary of the June 30, 2013 demonstrations, Sisi attacked the late President Mohamed Morsi, saying, "Millions of people came out, declaring its categorical rejection of all attempts to kidnap the country, which was taken over by those who did not realize the value and greatness of Egypt."

In the June 30 demonstrations, Egyptians demanded the late President Mohamed Morsi to leave and organize early presidential elections, and two days later, Sisi, who was then defense minister, announced the military coup on July 3, 2013, and arrested Morsi and several leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood and the Islamist movement.

During the celebration of the seventh anniversary and the opening of a number of projects, Sisi announced the launch of the official website of the Presidency of the Republic, indicating that it includes everything related to the presidency of news, information, visits and events, and thanked for the great effort made in implementing the site that "gives an opportunity to every Egyptian, and everyone who wishes Seeing what has happened in Egypt during the past 6 years. "

The site provides information about the presidency and biographies of all former presidents, beginning with Mohamed Naguib, the first president of the Egyptian Republic.

The site included the name of the late President Mohamed Morsi as one of Egypt's former presidents. It also included a brief autobiography that included his academic degrees and his political career, starting from his membership in the Egyptian Parliament as a candidate for the Brotherhood and speaking for its parliamentary bloc, then he won the presidency and removed him and his death.

The site was accompanied by Morsi's biography with some of his personal photos, as well as pictures with Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, former army chief and Lieutenant-General Sami Annan, former chief of staff, and a photo of him during the oath of office in Tahrir Square in 2012.

The page of former President Mohamed Morsi on the Egyptian presidency website, which was announced today by President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi pic.twitter.com/V4xvSKc22b

- Ahmed Ragab (@Ragab) June 29, 2020

Although it is natural for the site to include the name of the late President Mohamed Morsi as one of the successors to the presidency of Egypt, but what the Egyptians used to distort the name of Morsi since the military coup, what drew the attention of the pioneers of communication sites to include his name in the presidential site without the usual distortion.

Since the military coup, the Egyptian media have deliberately not mentioned Morsi before, describing the president, as well as his family name "Al-Ayyat" as a kind of name-calling, and upon his death in the courtroom last year, the newspapers published a small news of his death in his abstract name.

It is now common in Egypt at the moment not to mention Morsi’s name when talking about Egypt’s former presidents, despite the mention of temporary presidents such as Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, the head of the military council that ran the country after former President Hosni Mubarak stepped down in 2011 until Morsi's assumption of the presidency in 2012, and Chancellor Adly Mansour The former constitutional court, who was appointed by Sisi as interim president after the military coup in 2013 and until Sisi assumed the presidency himself in 2014.

It was also remarkable when referring to Morsi's affiliation with the Muslim Brotherhood, not to add the description of "prohibited", contrary to what the authority and its media have been doing since the coup, of describing the group as prohibited or terrorist.

The information released by the presidential website, which was announced by the Sisi coup, and which belongs to the information of the martyr # Mohamed # Morsi, is incorrect.
President Morsi's birth date is 20 August 1951, not 8 August as published.
The university where he worked as a post-doctoral student is California State University in Northridge
(continued) pic.twitter.com/g7ZteuaDvR

- Morsi Foundation For Democracy (@morsidemocracy) June 29, 2020

The link of the page of the martyr president
Mohamed Morsi on the Egyptian presidential website, which was launched by Sisi today
https://t.co/nOXZoUAbZR

Abdulaziz Mujahed (@ elmogahed02) June 29, 2020