Egypt grants citizenship to acclaimed filmmaker

Daily News Egypt
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Egyptian director Mohamed Khan holds his best director prize for the film Shakh Fi Masr Al-Gadeda at the 23th Alexandria International Film Festival on September 11, 2007 at the Alexandria Opera House (Photo / AFP / File / Amro Maraghi)
Egyptian director Mohamed Khan holds his best director prize for the film Shakh Fi Masr Al-Gadeda at the 23th Alexandria International Film Festival on September 11, 2007 at the Alexandria Opera House (Photo / AFP / File / Amro Maraghi)
Egyptian director Mohamed Khan holds his best director prize for the film Shakh Fi Masr Al-Gadeda at the 23th Alexandria International Film Festival on September 11, 2007 at the Alexandria Opera House
(Photo / AFP / File / Amro Maraghi)

AFP – Egypt granted citizenship Wednesday to one of its most renowned filmmakers, Mohamed Khan, a British national born to an Egyptian mother and a Pakistani father, the president’s office said.

Egyptian women married to foreigners were not allowed to pass on their citizenship to their children prior to a 2004 amendment to the nationality law.

Khan has been one of Egypt’s leading film directors since the 1980s, making a string of movies tackling social issues that have often revolved around female central characters.

His latest film, Factory Girl, won two awards at the 2013 Dubai International Film Festival and went on release in Cairo on Wednesday.

The film tells the story of Hiyam, a young factory worker living in a lower-middle-class neighbourhood of Cairo, who falls in love with her supervisor.

Born in Cairo in 1942, Khan was educated in Britain before beginning his film career in the Egyptian capital in the 1960s as a script writer.

He spent a spell working as an assistant director in Lebanon before settling back in Egypt.

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