Egypt official resigns over error-strewn constitution poster
The official has resigned amid controversy over a poster to promote a new draft constitution that featured images of non-Egyptians
An Egyptian official has resigned amid controversy over a poster to promote a new draft constitution that featured images of non-Egyptians and misspelled “Egyptians” in Arabic, state media reported Wednesday.
Amgad Abdel Ghaffar, head of the State Information Service, the government's media arm, had already apologized for the poster, which featured Caucasian-looking images under the caption: “All Egyptians Constitution.”
State television said he had tendered his resignation.
The large poster, featuring a doctor, a woman, a peasant and a soldier, was meant to capture a cross-section of Egyptian society.
But at least three of the images turned out to be of non-Egyptian models featured in stock photographs on other websites.
The photographs appear to have been found using Google searches for “doctor” and “business woman.”
The banner also misspelled “Egyptians” in Arabic, as pointed out by one journalist at the press conference held earlier this week to promote the constitution ahead of a referendum in January.
Egypt's military-installed government has billed the referendum as a key step in a democratic transition following the army's overthrow of Islamist president Mohamed Mursi in July.
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