Dubai, United Arab Emirates (CNN) – The Musical Professions Syndicate announced… EgyptOn Friday, work permits were resumed for the Lebanese artist Haifa WehbeThis came after the end of the legal dispute between her and one of the party attendants who lodged a complaint against her before the union.
Both parties appeared before the Music Professionals Legal Affairs Syndicate and “acknowledged settlement and compromise, and returned the value of the investment in the work permit complaint to artist Haifa Wehbe,” according to the text of the statement. the Syndicate issued.
Several media reported on the video, including the Al-Ahram website. Video of settlement between the two partiesIn the document, Wehbe thanked the Syndicate of Musical Professions in Egypt for its “understanding, its role in bringing ideas closer together,” and for standing by the Lebanese artist. that she is always working in Egypt “under the wing of the Syndicate”, according to what was said in her words in the video.
And it was The Syndicate of Musical Professions in Egypt has contacted the Lebanese artist Haifa WehbeOn Tuesday, the issuance of her work permits was suspended until she arrived at the union’s headquarters and “appeared for examination before the union’s Legal Affairs Department” regarding the complaints filed against her.
This announcement came after she breached the terms of an artistic contract between herself and a film production company despite receiving an investment for the contract, and broke an agreement to hold a concert on the North Coast and the to receive an agreed amount, which led to finance. damage to the concert organizer.
Wehbe overcame her crisis on Wednesday with Egypt’s Syndicate of Action ProfessionsAfter Ashraf Zaki, the head of the Syndicate of Musical Professions in Egypt, spoke to his colleague, Mustafa Kamel, the head of the Syndicate of Musical Professions, on Wednesday, to inform him about lifting the ban on work permits for the Lebanese artist Haifa Wehbe , after “preserving the subject of the complaint” filed against her by one of the art production companies.