Arabic newspapers, for example, often use racist language, both out of ignorance or malice – and major newspapers with large circulation are no exception.
This week, following the anti-police brutality protests in the United States and the violence in Dallas and Colorado, one Egyptian newspaper used the Arabic equivalent of the N-word
On Saturday,
al-Shuruq al-Jadid, a major Egyptian newspaper, used the word
Zunuj, Arabic for "negroes", for its front-page story on the Black Lives Matter protests in the United States.
The full headline reads in translation: "America's negroes take up arms against police violations".
This kind of blatant racism, however, is nothing new.
In August 2014, Egypt's
al-Yawm al-Sabei ran with an investigation on alleged black gangs in Cairo, and used the English word "niggers" in the
Arabic headline, which read,
Niggers: The gangs of black terror in Cairo. The article itself contained racist generalisations about black people, specifically those who are Sudanese nationals in Egypt.
The article was later edited, removing the extremely offensive term.