ເດືອນຣາມາດານ ສິ້ນສຸດລົງ ອີຈິບ ເປີດຮ້ານຂາຍເຫຼົ້າ ບາງແຫ່ງ

Young Egyptian men take a selfie photograph in front of one of the local liquor stores as they celebrate its reopening on the last day of Ramadan, in Cairo, Egypt, June 5, 2016. Liquor is legally prohibited for Egyptians in Egypt during the holy month of Ramadan.

“I just turned 21 yesterday, and Ramadan is just finished, and tomorrow is the Eid. I’m trying to celebrate to my max, having my beer legally is the biggest celebration for me and it feels so good,” says Amira Hamdy, in Cairo Egypt, June 5, 2016.

Young Egyptians laugh as one of their friends drops his beer as they celebrate the reopening of one of the city's few liquor stores at the end of Ramadan, in Cairo, Egypt, June 5, 2016.

"My Egyptian friends and clients are back having their beer, and I’m happy to serve them beer, and hear their jokes all the night,” barman Uncle Abdo, 62, says in Cairo, Egypt, June 5, 2016. Ramadan ended on Tuesday.

Islam Talat, 26, says he was freed from "an accusation of protest last week." He says he was protesting Egypt's plan to hand over Tiran and Sanafer islands to Saudi Arabia, a move that has sparked the largest anti-government street protests in Egypt since President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi took office two years ago. Tuesday was the first day Talat could drink, he says.