b_179_129_16777215_00_images_ARA_news_egy120219aa001.jpeg

CAIRO — In the late 1700s, Fahmy Ali Al-Fishawy established what became Egypt's most prominent coffee shop in the heart of Islamic Cairo. Nobel Prize winner Naguib Mahfouz was one among dozens of novelists, artists, politicians and even presidents who regularly sipped their mint tea and smoked water pipes at the historical, arabesque-styled cafe.

For more than 200 years, Al-Fishawy café, which is listed in almost every Egypt tourist guidebook, never closed before dawn or as long as customers continued to scent the air with fruit-flavored water pipe smoke. But as of December, Al-Fishawy and every other café and restaurant in Egypt will be forced to shut down at 2 a.m. while shops will have to close at midnight.

Read more at Al Monitor

You are here: Home Newsroom Featured stories FEATURED: Middle East/North Africa Egypt's government: 'Night Law' to brace for economic impact