Sadek told an audience, during a speech at Cairo University this week, that the Academy Award-winning US cartoon, alongside video games and violent movies, is responsible for the spread of violence in the region.
"[The cartoon] sends the message that, yes, I can hit him… and I can blow him up with explosives. It becomes set in [the viewer's] mind that this is natural," he explained, cited by the EgyptianStreets website.
Sadek added that playing violent video games has become therapy for youth dealing with social and cultural pressures, adding that young people begin to regard violent behavior as normal, after spending time immersed in some gaming scenarios.
"It has become very normal for a young man to spend long hours playing video games, killing and spilling blood, and he's happy and content," he said.
Social media immediately exploded with sardonic responses from those outraged with the assertions of the senior official.
Another masterpiece. Head of egypt's state information service says tom and Jerry one of the causes of widespread violence in the Arab world
— Summer Said (@summer_said) May 4, 2016
ME violence nothing to do with extra judicial killings, police torture, govt oppression — it's Tom & Jerry's faulthttps://t.co/U9hMhULpu9
— Andrew Reid (@andrewincairo) May 4, 2016
privately-owned media website.
That article developed the idea that "Tom and Jerry" encourages children to "come up with sinister plans" and "encourages violence and the use of sharp instruments such as knives, guns, and chainsaws."