person:abdel fattah al-sisi

  • The Armed Forces and business: Economic expansion in the last 12 months
    http://www.madamasr.com/sections/economy/armed-forces-and-business-economic-expansion-last-12-months

    Since President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi’s appointment in mid-2014, the Armed Forces’ economic activities have expanded and diversified. According to researchers, the last 12 months have witnessed swift expansion into several sectors, documentation for which can be found in the Official Gazette, minutes of official meetings and media reports.

    #Egypte #armée #business

  • The Armed Forces and Egypt’s land | Mada Masr
    http://www.madamasr.com/sections/economy/armed-forces-and-egypts-land

    In February, President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi issued a decree to direct the Armed Forces Land Projects Agency (AFLPA) to oversee construction of two of Egypt’s mega-projects to be built on 16,000 acres under military control: the new capital city and Sheikh Zeyad’s new urban community. The decree granted AFLPA the power to form joint ventures.

    The move is indicative of the political direction increasingly taken by Egypt’s authorities to expand the Armed Forces’ involvement in the economy. This military involvement does not only take the form of oversight and contractual management, but increasingly is articulated through the formation of joint venture investments wherein the military allocates desert land under its control – land whose value is expected to appreciate markedly – to companies affiliated with the Armed Forces, as a capital investment.

    Does allowing the AFLPA to form joint ventures signal a major transformation in the military’s role in Egypt’s economy?

    • First, it establishes a legal framework to allow the Armed Forces to use desert land as an investment. Egyptian jurisprudence’s historical attention to national defense has led to the consolidation of desert lands under the control of the Armed Forces. Most desert land fell under the control of the Armed Forces in the 1950s and 1960s. At the time, desert land had little economic value, as Egypt’s population was concentrated in the Nile Valley and the Delta – a situation that has completely changed over the last three decades. Economic and population growth have become increasingly dependent on expansion into Egypt’s once uninhabitable deserts. Expansion has taken the form of land reclamation and housing projects, new industrial cities and tourist attractions. The development of each of these initiatives is contingent upon access to affordable desert land, which the government has been able to provide using the compensatory framework of the original desert land law: the Armed Forces is paid for the utility costs incurred during its relocation. However, in reality, the state and the military, often indivisible, have used desert land to acquire economic gains, either through the outright sale of land or through the recent practice of using land as a capital investment in urban development companies.

      Second, the recent presidential decree changes the way in which the Armed Forces use desert land. Access to desert land has allowed the NSPO to transform Egypt’s transportation infrastructure through the construction of roads, overpasses and tunnels. However, now – as evinced by the government’s projects in the administrative capital and the Suez Canal channel, as well as in affordable housing – the Armed Forces have pivoted and will commence a foray into urban and industrial projects as well as logistical services. The move may augur AFLPA’s more frequent use of its land possessions as capital investments in joint ventures with Arab and international investors.

      Il y a qqs mois sur le même sujet : Barayez A.-F., 2016, « This Land is their Land »: Egypt’s Military and the Economy, in Jadaliyya, < http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/23671/« this-land-is-their-land »_egypt’s-military-and-the >

  • Is Israel forming an alliance with Egypt and Saudi Arabia? - Al-Monitor: the Pulse of the Middle East
    http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2016/04/israel-al-sisi-egypt-saudi-arabia-islands-transfer-alliance.html#

    According to a senior security official, who spoke to Al-Monitor on condition of anonymity, Ya’alon emphasized to his associates that security cooperation between Israel and Egypt had reached an all-time high. The security systems of the two countries share the same interests. Egyptians, for instance, help Israel contain and cordon off Hamas in Gaza.

    The recent move — the transfer of the two islands to Saudi Arabia — reveals part of the dialogue that has been developing between Israel and its Sunni neighbors. A highly placed Israeli security official, who spoke to Al-Monitor anonymously, added some details: Israel’s relationships in the region are deep and important. The moderate Arab countries have not forgotten the Ottoman period, and are very worried about the growing strength and enlargement of the two non-Arab empires of the past: Iran and Turkey. On this background, many regional players realize that Israel is not the problem, but the solution. Israel’s dialogue with the large, important Sunni countries remains mainly under the radar, but it deepens all the time and it bears fruit.

    Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi’s action has aroused sharp public criticism in Egypt. The president’s opponents argue that under the Egyptian Constitution he has no authority to give up Egyptian territory, but Sisi rightly warded off this criticism: These islands originally belonged to Saudi Arabia, which transferred them to Egypt in 1950 as part of the effort to strangle Israel from the south, and prevent the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) from taking control of them. Israel embarked on two wars (the Sinai War in 1956 and the Six Day War in 1967) for navigation rights in the Red Sea. It took over these islands twice, but then returned them to Egypt both times. Now events have come full circle, and the Egyptians are returning the islands to their original owner, Saudi Arabia. This is a goodwill gesture from Sisi to King Salman bin Abdul-Aziz Al Saud, after the Saudis committed themselves to the economic solvency of the Egyptian regime for the next five years. The Saudis are making massive investments in Egypt and providing financial support to save the Egyptian economy from collapse.

    There is another aspect to the Egyptian transfer of the islands to Saudi Arabia: In the past, several proposals were raised regarding regional land swaps, with the goal of resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The framework is, in principle, simple: Egypt would enlarge Gaza southward and allow the Gaza Strip’s Palestinians more open space and breathing room. In exchange for this territory, Egypt would receive from Israel a narrow strip the length of the borderline between the two countries, the Israeli Negev desert region from Egyptian Sinai. The Palestinians, in contrast, would transfer the West Bank settlement blocs to Israel. Jordan could also join such an initiative; it could contribute territories of its own and receive others in exchange. To date, this approach was categorically disqualified by the Egyptians in the Hosni Mubarak era. Now that it seems that territorial transfer has become a viable possibility under the new conditions of the Middle East, the idea of Israeli-Egyptian territorial swaps are also reopened; in the past, these land swap possibilities fired the imaginations of many in the region. In his day, former head of Israel’s National Security Council Maj. Gen. Giora Eiland led a regional initiative on the subject. But he was stymied by Egypt.

    #Israël #Egypte #Arabie_Saoudite #Turquie

  • The Emirati plan for ruling Egypt
    http://www.middleeasteye.net/news/exclusive-emirati-plan-ruling-egypt-2084590756

    A top-secret strategy document prepared for Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan reveals that the United Arab Emirates is losing faith in the ability of Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi to serve the Gulf state’s interests.

    The document, prepared by one of Bin Zayed’s team and dated 12 October, contains two key quotes which describe the frustration bin Zayed feels about Sisi, whose military coup the Crown Prince bankrolled, pouring in billions of dollars along with Saudi Arabia. It says: “This guy needs to know that I am not an ATM machine.” Further on, it also reveals the political price the Emiratis will exact if they continue to fund Egypt.

    Future strategy should be based on not just attempting to influence the government in Egypt but to control it. It is summarised thus: “Now I will give but under my conditions. If I give, I rule.”

  • President Sisi’s Canal Extravaganza |
    With spectacle and ceremony, Egypt’s president unveiled an unnecessary infrastructure project in a country that is falling to pieces.
    BY SARAH CARRAUGUST 7, 2015 Foreign Policy
    http://foreignpolicy.com/2015/08/07/sisi-dredges-the-depth-egypt-suez-canal-boondoggle

    CAIRO — How apt that Egypt’s latest “gift to the world,” the “New Suez Canal,” makes a two-lane freeway out of the conduit that connects the Red Sea to the Mediterranean. Everything else in Egypt is going in two opposing directions. The response to the Canal has been no different; polarized and circling round the real issue, like demented frigates.

    In 2014 while on a visit to the United Nations, President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi announced that Egypt intended to dust off plans for a project to expand the Suez Canal area that had been buried since the Hosni Mubarak era. A new canal, some 25 kilometers long, has been built parallel to the original canal. In addition, 23 kilometers of the original canal have been widened and deepened. The Egyptian government claims that this has “eradicated” waiting time for up to 50 vessels per day.

    Initially, the project had a three-year timeline, but in a prime bit of theater Sisi enthusiastically demanded that this be reduced to a year while Suez Canal Authority head Vice-Admiral Mohab Mameesh was in the middle of delivering a PowerPoint presentation on the project to military and government bigwigs. “One year! One year and it’ll be finished!” a grinning Sisi said, holding up a finger and then brushing the palms of his hands together. “A year and it will be implemented, sir,” Memeesh replied.

    And now it’s happened.

  • Canal de Suez : le sermon de la prière de vendredi comparera son inauguration à une bataille du Prophète et ses compagnons contre les juifs - Egypt independent

    http://www.egyptindependent.com/news/friday-sermon-compare-new-canal-muslim-conquests

    A unified Friday prayer sermon dictated by the Endowments Ministry will compare the opening of the New Suez Canal, President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi’s most celebrated undertaking, to the Muslim conquests during the era of Prophet Mohamed.

    (...)The text goes far to compare the new canal to a trench dug by Prophet Mohamed and his companions around Medina as a line of defense against his Jewish rivals during one of Islam’s most celebrated battles.

    “The digging of the new canal represents determination and resilience against hostile powers seeking the ruin of Egypt,” read the text of the sermon.

    Sur @OrientXXI Égypte : canal de Suez, encore un projet pharaonique…et contesté
    http://orientxxi.info/magazine/egypte-canal-de-suez-encore-un,0727

  • Former Hamas official speaks out - Al-Monitor: the Pulse of the Middle East
    http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2015/05/hamas-war-gaza-ahmed-youssef-ismail-haniyeh-advisor.html

    For how long will the tension between Hamas and Egypt last? Is Hamas now convinced that Abdel Fattah al-Sisi is there to stay and that the era of Mohammed Morsi is gone for ever?

    Yousef: The repercussions of the overthrow of President Mohammed Morsi were like an earthquake on Hamas because the movement lost a strong ally in Egypt, which has served as a backbone. [Hamas] found itself with a political regime [in Egypt] that sees [Hamas] as an adversary that must be fought and weakened. But Hamas has agreed to deal with the current Egyptian regime and sought to repair its relationship with [the regime]. [Hamas] has sent signals in that direction, but the regime still refuses to deal with [Hamas]. Over a month ago, some meetings were held to open a new page in the relationship, but the results have yet to appear.

    Read more: http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2015/05/hamas-war-gaza-ahmed-youssef-ismail-haniyeh-advisor.html#ixzz3bHpSEkVU

  • Egypte : Sissi signe une nouvelle loi qui donne encore plus de pouvoir aux autorités dans le cadre de « la guerre contre le terrorisme » - Reuters/Daily mail

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/wires/reuters/article-2966496/Egypts-Sisi-issues-decree-widening-scope-security-crackdown.html

    CAIRO, Feb 24 (Reuters) - Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi has signed off on an anti-terrorism law that gives authorities more sweeping powers to ban groups on charges ranging from harming national unity to disrupting public order.
    The move, announced in the official Gazette, is likely to increase concern among human rights groups that the government has rolled back on freedoms gained after the 2011 uprising that ended a three-decade autocracy under Hosni Mubarak.
    Authorities have cracked down hard on the Islamist, secular and liberal opposition alike since then army chief Sisi toppled elected Islamist president Mohamed Mursi in 2013 after mass protests against his rule.
    According to the government’s Gazette, the law enables authorities to act against any individual or group deemed a threat to national security, including people who disrupt public transportation, an apparent reference to protests.
    Loose definitions involving threats to national unity may give the police, widely accused of abuses, a green light to crush dissent, human rights groups say.
    The Interior Ministry says it investigates all allegations of wrongdoing and is committed to Egypt’s democratic transition.
    Under the mechanism of the law, public prosecutors ask a criminal court to list suspects as terrorists and start a trial.
    Any group designated as terrorist would be dissolved, the law stipulates. It also allows for the freezing of assets belonging to the group, its members and financiers.
    Since taking office in 2014, Sisi has identified Mursi’s Muslim Brotherhood as a threat to national security.
    He has linked the Brotherhood, the region’s oldest Islamist grouping, with far more radical groups, including one based in Sinai that supports Islamic State, allegations it denies.
    Hundreds of supporters of the Brotherhood, which says it is a peaceful movement, have been killed and thousands arrested in one of the toughest security crackdowns in Egypt’s history.
    Since Mursi’s fall, Sinai-based militants have killed hundreds of police and soldiers, and the beheading of up to 21 Egyptians in neighbouring Libya prompted Sisi to order airstrikes against militant targets there.
    Some Egyptians have overlooked widespread allegations of human rights abuses and backed Sisi for delivering a degree of stability following years of political turmoil triggered by the 2011 Arab Spring uprising.

  • The Tsar and Pharaoh deepen ties in Cairo

    Putin’s Kalashnikov Diplomacy Gets a Win in Egypt | Foreign Policy
    http://foreignpolicy.com/2015/02/10/putins-kalashnikov-diplomacy-gets-a-win-in-egypt-sisi-moscow-eurasian

    Just when you thought Russian President Vladimir Putin couldn’t possibly do more to resemble a comic book villain, he goes and outdoes himself. The Russian leader was in Cairo Tuesday for meetings with his Egyptian counterpart, Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, and presented the former general with a modest gift: a Kalashnikov assault rifle.

    The gift was a red bow on top of a series of agreements strengthening ties between Russia and Egypt. The two leaders announced the creation of a free-trade zone between Egypt and the Russian-led Eurasian Economic Union, a Russian industrial zone near the Suez Canal, and Russian aid in the construction of a nuclear power plant.

  • #Egypt Sentences Four to Death for Alleged Collaboration With Al-Qaeda
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/egypt-sentences-four-death-alleged-collaboration-al-qaeda

    An Egyptian court on Monday referred four men convicted of “collaborating with al-Qaeda” to Egypt’s grand mufti, the country’s top religious authority, to consider possible death sentences against them, a judicial source said. A Cairo criminal court referred three Egyptians and an Iraqi Kurd – in absentia – to Grand Mufti Shawki Allam over charges that they had collaborated with al-Qaeda and provided the militant group with security-related information. read more

    #Abdel_Fattah_al-Sisi #death_penalty #Muslim_Brotherhood

  • Egypte/atteinte aux droits : Un élargissement des pouvoirs des tribunaux militaires sans précédent - Communiqué Human Rights Watch

    http://www.hrw.org/news/2014/11/17/egypt-unprecedented-expansion-military-courts

    An October 27 decree by President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi of Egypt vastly extended the reach of the country’s military courts and risks militarizing the prosecution of protesters and other government opponents.

    The new law, decreed by al-Sisi in the absence of a parliament, places all “public and vital facilities” under military jurisdiction for the next two years and directs state prosecutors to refer any crimes at those places to their military counterparts, paving the way for further military trials of civilians. Egypt’s military courts, which lack even the shaky due process guarantees provided by regular courts, have tried more than 11,000 civilians since the 2011 uprising.

    “This law represents another nail in the coffin of justice in Egypt,” said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East and North Africa director. “Its absurdly broad provisions mean that many more civilians who engage in protests can now expect to face trial before uniformed judges subject to the orders of their military superiors.”

    On November 16, a Cairo criminal court referred five al-Azhar University students to military court on charges related to repeated protests that have broken out at the university against al-Sisi’s government. The students are charged with joining a terrorist organization, displaying force, threatening to use violence, possession of Molotov cocktails, and vandalism, according to the Aswat Masriya news service. The criminal court reportedly ruled that it lacked jurisdiction in the case.

    Al-Sisi issued the decree three days after an attack in the Sinai Peninsula killed dozens of soldiers, the deadliest strike yet in an insurgency that has grown since the army ousted Egypt’s democratically elected president, Mohamed Morsy, in July 2013.

    The new decree, Law 136 of 2014 for the Securing and Protection of Public and Vital Facilities, states that the armed forces “shall offer assistance to the police and fully coordinate with them in securing and protecting public and vital facilities,” including electricity stations, gas pipelines, oil wells, railroads, road networks, bridges, and any similar state-owned property.

    Military judges have presided over trials of civilians in Egypt for decades, despite efforts by activists and some politicians to eliminate the practice. In the months following the 2011 uprising, for example, Egypt’s military courts tried almost 12,000 civilians on an array of regular criminal charges. But the new law greatly expands the jurisdiction of military courts, giving them their widest legal authority since the birth of Egypt’s modern republic in 1952. Before al-Sisi’s decree, Egypt’s constitution and code of military justice theoretically limited military prosecutions to cases that directly involved the armed forces or their property, though the country’s 31-year state of emergency, which expired in 2012, allowed the president to refer civilians to military courts.

    Egypt’s military appears intent on interpreting the new law broadly. Interviewed on the CBC television channel on November 1, General Medhat Ghozy, who heads the Military Judiciary Authority, said that military jurisdiction now extends over any building or property that provides a “general service” or is state owned.

    “If there’s a public facility, or a vital one, when it’s assaulted, who’s the attacker?” Ghozy said. “[It doesn’t matter] if it’s a woman, or a man, or a teacher, or a student, or a teenager, or a child … the law is a general, abstract rule. We can’t say now: these are universities, these are factories, these are electricity stations.”

    Since al-Sisi – a former defense minister and army chief – oversaw the forcible removal and imprisonment of Morsy in the wake of mass protests in July 2013, military courts have tried at least 140 civilians, according to the Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies, including three children and four journalists. Most of the accused have faced charges of assaulting military personnel or equipment.

    On October 21, a military court imposed death sentences for seven men and life sentences for two others for their involvement in three violent incidents in March 2014 that left nine soldiers dead. Authorities alleged that the men belonged to Ansar Beit al-Maqdis, Egypt’s most prominent insurgent group. On November 10, the group pledged allegiance to the Syria-based organization Islamic State, also known as ISIS.

    Police claim to have arrested the nine men in a March 19 raid on an abandoned warehouse in the Qalyubia governorate, north of Cairo, and to have found evidence of explosives and weapons used in the lethal attacks on soldiers earlier that month. But the trial, conducted before a panel of generals at the Hikestep military base northeast of Cairo, lacked basic due process guarantees, putting its fairness in question.

    Ahmed Helmy, a lawyer for four of the men, told Human Rights Watch that families of three defendants first sought his help in January, two months before the police say they arrested the men, suggesting that the authorities’ account of the raid was inaccurate.

    “These three defendants simply disappeared separately in November and December 2013, months before the events they are charged with – they were kept in Azouli prison,” Helmy said, referring to a secret military facility inside al-Galaa army base in the Suez Canal city of Ismailia, which the authorities have used to hold up to hundreds of civilian detainees, according to human rights groups and media reports. “We filed a complaint to the public prosecutor but the authorities kept denying that the three guys were in custody.”

    Helmy said that the authorities would not allow him to visit his clients in custody before the trial and that he first met them at the initial court hearing in June.

    A brother of Hani Amer, one of the defendants, told Human Rights Watch that Amer disappeared on December 16, 2013, after visiting the district director’s office in Ismailia to obtain a permit for his information technology company. The brother said that witnesses told the family that men in civilian clothes had detained Amer and his business partner, Ahmed Suleiman, as well as the district director. The director, whom authorities released hours later, eventually told the family that police had taken Amer to the Galaa base.

    Amer later told his brother that authorities had moved him in March from Azouli prison to the high-security Scorpion facility inside Tora Prison in Cairo. When his brother visited him there on August 10, Amer showed no obvious signs of injury, although Suleiman, the business partner, had told the brother that Amer’s shoulders had been dislocated by torture when he was held in Azouli prison months earlier.

    Another defendant appeared at the military trial in a wheelchair. His father told Human Rights Watch that his son had disappeared on March 16 or 17, 2014, following which the father filed complaints with the Interior Ministry without success. Later, he said, a man who refused to disclose his identify visited the father’s home and told him that authorities were holding his son in Tora Prison.

    When the father eventually obtained permission to visit his son, for only a few minutes, he found his son using crutches.

    “He said that they tortured him,” the father said. “His left knee was completely destroyed and his left femur bone was broken. I asked him directly, ‘Did you meet with a prosecutor?’ He said he couldn’t know because he was blindfold during most of the interrogations. All the confessions were dictated by officers under torture.”

    Helmy, the lawyer, told Human Rights Watch that even though the men can appeal their sentences, the authorities have made the defendants wear the orange jumpsuits worn by prisoners who have received final verdicts, apparently to “pressure them psychologically.” He has tried to convince the men to lodge appeals, but so far they have declined.

    The father of the other said he had also urged his son to appeal, but that his son responded: “You don’t hire a room from someone who stole your house.”

    The nine men also face trial before a regular criminal court as part of a group of more than 200 defendants accused of belonging to Ansar Beit al-Maqdis.

    Egypt’s military courts operate under the authority of the Defense Ministry, not the civilian judicial authorities. They typically deny defendants rights accorded by civilian courts, including the right to be informed of the charges against them, and the rights to access a lawyer and to be brought promptly before a judge following arrest.

    In April, a military court sentenced a social media manager for the online news website Rassd to one year in prison for helping to leak a tape of remarks by al-Sisi during his time as defense minister. The court acquitted one Rassd employee and sentenced two others who remain at large and an army conscript to three-year prison terms. In May and September, military courts handed down one-year sentences against 10 defendants – mostly Muslim Brotherhood members or allied politicians – for attempting to cross into Sudan illegally. In Suez, a military court has repeatedly postponed the trial of 20 civilians arrested in August 2013 and charged with attacking government buildings.

    The use of military courts to try civilians violates the 1981 African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, which Egypt’s parliament ratified in 1984. The African human rights commission Principles and Guideline on the Right to a Fair Trial and Legal Assistance explicitly forbid military trials of civilians in all circumstances.

    Al-Sisi’s law closely resembles a pair of decrees that Justice Minister Adel Abdel Hamid and Egypt’s then-ruling military council issued in June 2012, just before Morsy’s election and immediately after the country’s long-running state of emergency expired. Abdel Hamid’s decree empowered military police and intelligence officers to arrest civilians, while the military council’s decree empowered the president to call in soldiers “to share in law enforcement duties and the protection of public institutions.”

    Article 204 of Egypt’s constitution, drafted and approved by popular referendum in January during the interim government that followed Morsy’s removal, specifies a range of crimes for which civilians can be tried in military courts, including assaults on military personnel or equipment, or crimes that involve military factories, funds, secrets, or documents. It is largely the same as Article 198 of the previous constitution, passed during the Morsy administration, which also allowed military courts to put civilians on trial over the protest of activists and some politicians.

    “This new decree is pernicious and contrary to basic standards of justice,” Whitson said. “Egypt’s authorities should annul all the military court verdicts against civilians handed down since the new government took power, and President al-Sisi needs to act quickly to amend his decree.”

  • Egypte : Sissi annonce « la défaite des islamistes » aux élections législatives de 2015 - Egypt independant

    http://www.egyptindependent.com/news/sisi-islamists-won-t-win-parliament-elections

    President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi has ruled out an Islamist win during the anticipated parliament elections which he promised to run before the end of March 2015.
     
    “My bit is on the awareness of Egyptians during the next elections”, he was quoted by former Kuwaiti information minister Sami al-Nisf, who spoke to Al-Masry Al-Youm following Sisi’s meeting with a delegation of Kuwaiti media figures and businessmen.
     
    “Nobody can buy Egyptians’ votes,” Sisi was quoted as replying to his guests, who voiced fears that “dishonest” tactics would be used to lure voters during the polls.
     
    Islamists dominated a majority of the People’s Assembly under the formerly-ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Forces in 2012 before the Supreme Constitutional Court dissolved it in June of the same year.
     
    Parliamentary elections were scheduled to be held before the end of 2014 based on the roadmap that was declared following the ouster of Mohamed Morsy. But the delay in adopting the law on constituencies disabled the government from setting a timetable for the vote.
     
    The delay has provoked government opponents who see it as a violation of the roadmap.

    Sur @OrientXXI Une stratégie d’élimination des Frères musulmans http://orientxxi.info/magazine/egypte-une-strategie-d-elimination,0362

  • Egypt received $10.6 billion from Gulf last fiscal year: minister
    http://english.alarabiya.net/en/business/economy/2014/11/08

    Egypt received $10.6 billion from Gulf last fiscal year: minister

    Reuters, Cairo

    Egypt received $10.6 billion in aid from Gulf states in the last fiscal year, the finance minister said on Saturday, the first time the government has put a total figure on how much its oil-rich allies spent to prop up the economy.

    Of about 74 billion Egyptian pounds of aid received in the 2013-14 fiscal year, 53 billion pounds was in the form of petroleum products, with the remaining 21 billion pounds coming as cash grants, Hany Kadry Dimian told a news conference.

    Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait have provided Egypt with political and economic support since then-army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi ousted elected Islamist President Mohammad Mursi in July last year and led a crackdown on his supporters.

    Sisi went on to win a presidential election in May and has promised to restore stability and growth to a country convulsed by turmoil since the 2011 overthrow of Hosni Mubarak.

    Soon after Mursi’s removal, Gulf states pledged Egypt about $12 billion aid. In September 2013, the Egyptian Central Bank chief said about $7 billion of that had been received. But Saturday’s figures are the most concrete to date.

    Although his critics say political freedoms have been eroded under Sisi, the government has passed a raft of reforms from subsidy cuts to tax hikes that have impressed business leaders.

    Egypt’s government deficit shrank as a percentage of gross domestic product last year, Dimian said, a positive sign for a government that is trying to balance cutting its deficit and reviving growth.

    The deficit was 255.4 billion pounds, or about 12.8 percent of GDP, in 2013-14, he said, compared to 13.7 percent of GDP, or 239.7 billion pounds, in the previous year.

    Egypt’s spending on a generous subsidy system that is weighing on government finances rose by 10 % last year, however, to 187.7 billion pounds. Most of last year’s subsidies bill, 126 billion pounds, was for fuel, the minister said.

    The government cut energy subsidies in July, the start of the current fiscal year, in a bid to better balance its books. But the move raised prices of gasoline, diesel and natural gas by up to 78 percent and caused a spike in inflation.

  • Egypte - Sissi émet un décret élargissant le pouvoir des militaires. Dans le cadre de la « lutte contre le terrorisme », les tribunaux militaires pourront juger des civils qui auraient attaqué certaines infrastructures. Le jugement de civils par des militaires sont dénoncés par des associations et activistes | Al Akhbar English

    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/egypts-sisi-expands-military-power-new-decree

    Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi on Monday enacted a decree allowing military trials for civilians suspected of attacking “state infrastructure,” after a string of deadly attacks on soldiers.

    The decree came after Sisi promised a tough response to what he called an “existential threat” to Egypt posed by militants, following an attack Friday on an army checkpoint in the Sinai that killed at least 30 soldiers.

    It places state infrastructure including electricity towers, major thoroughfares and bridges under military protection for two years, allowing the army to try anyone suspected of attacking the public facilities.

    “Crimes against public institutions, facilities and properties fall under the jurisdiction of the military judiciary,” the decree states.

    Egypt has witnessed a surge in militant attacks since the army, then led by Sisi, ousted Islamist president Mohammed Mursi from power in July 2013.

    Mursi’s ouster also unleashed a deadly police crackdown on his supporters that has left hundreds dead and thousands in jail.

    The government has also cracked down on protests, passing a law that banned all but police-sanctioned demonstrations.

    The military was already empowered with trying civilians for attacks on the army, but Sisi’s decree considerably expands its powers by defining state infrastructure as “military facilities.”

    Sisi’s spokesman, Alaa Youssef, told AFP the decree was not meant to target protests but would deal only with “terrorism.”

    “There is a big difference between attacking public installations and protesting,” he said. “They are two different things.”

    The law, he said, was aimed at “protecting public installations and utilities from terrorist attacks.”

    Youssef added that Sisi had issued the decree after consulting with Egypt’s National Defense Council, which is also headed by the president, and getting approval from the cabinet and State Council.

    On Sunday, an Egyptian court sentenced 23 pro-democracy activists to three years in prison each for holding an unlicensed protest on June 21 calling for the release of detainees and the annulment of the “all but police-sanctioned demonstrations” law.

    “The ruling is political, it has no legal grounding,” alleged Ahmed Ezzat, one of the defense lawyers, after judge Abdelrahman al-Zawary pronounced his verdict.

    Last month, Egyptian courts sentenced nearly 100 people to prison for up to 25 years after finding them guilty of violence during protests in support of Mursi.

    Hundreds of Mursi supporters have been handed lengthy jail terms and death sentences after speedy trials amid a brutal crackdown by the authorities since the Islamist’s overthrow in July last year.

    The crackdown has left at least 1,400 people dead, triggering an international outcry.

    Ending martial law throughout the country, which gives the authorities wide-ranging policing powers, was one of the demands of the popular uprising that ousted Hosni Mubarak in 2011 and paved the way for Islamist Mursi’s election a year later.

    The approved measure on military courts threatens to revive some of its most repressive aspects and could be used alongside a strict new law curbing protests. Liberal and secular activists have been targeted by that statute alongside thousands of Brotherhood supporters rounded up in Sisi’s crackdown.

    Sisi’s critics are likely to see such a step as the latest move to clamp down on dissent by a government that has jailed thousands of political opponents and banned the Muslim Brotherhood, which denies involvement in militant violence.

  • Egypt blasts Turkish leader Erdogan after U.N. speech
    http://mobile.reuters.com/article/idUSKCN0HK0TH20140925?irpc=932

    CAIRO (Reuters) - Egypt has accused Turkish leader Tayyip Erdogan of supporting terrorists and seeking to provoke mayhem in the Middle East after he questioned the legitimacy of Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi in a speech at the UN General Assembly.

  • #Egypt extends presidential vote to Wednesday amid low turnout
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/node/19922

    Egypt’s #presidential_election was extended by a day on Tuesday in an effort to boost lower than expected turnout that threatened to undermine the credibility of the front-runner, former army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi. After #Sisi called for record voter participation, low turnout would be seen at home and abroad as an immediate setback for the field marshal who toppled Egypt’s first freely elected leader, the #Muslim_Brotherhood's Mohammed Mursi.

    #April_6 #Articles #Boycott

  • Turkey PM slams Egypt’s ’illegitimate tyrant’ Sisi | News , Middle East | THE DAILY STAR
    http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Middle-East/2014/Jul-18/264373-turkey-pm-slams-egypts-illegitimate-tyrant-sisi.ashx#axzz37qoGQ

    ANKARA: Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Friday slammed Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi as an illegitimate tyrant, saying Cairo could not be relied upon to negotiate a truce with Israel.

    • ’Israel is not the enemy,’ says Egyptian secularist
      https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/news/africa/12907-israel-is-not-the-enemy-says-egyptian-secularist

      Mohamed Zaki El-Sheimy, member of the culture committee at the Free Egyptians Party, said that “Israel is not the enemy”, and called for eliminating the Palestinian resistance group Hamas.

      In an article published by the pro-regime website “Dot Misr”, Sheimy said: “Our foreign enemy now is not Israel, but rather the Muslim Brotherhood, Hamas, Qatar and Turkey. Israel is not the enemy; at least it’s not the biggest threat to us... Hamas is the enemy... Any weakening of Hamas serves Egypt’s interests.”

      The Free Egyptians Party, founded by Egyptian secular billionaire Naguib Sawiris, supported the army’s overthrow of freely elected president Mohamed Morsi last summer.

  • #Egypt jails seven men for life over sexual assaults
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/egypt-jails-seven-men-life-over-sexual-assaults

    An Egyptian court on Wednesday sentenced seven men to life in prison over sexual assaults at #Cairo's Tahrir Square, including during celebrations marking Abdel Fattah al-Sisi’s presidential election victory last month. Since the uprising that toppled long-time president Hosni Mubarak in 2011, the problem of sexual harassment has grown enormously in Egypt, with women regularly attacked at rallies by mobs of men in and around the iconic square, the epicenter of protests. (AFP)

    #sexual_assault

  • La campagne d’explication avant l’intervention ?

    Egyptians fear Islamist militants gathering on Libyan border - Al Arabiya News
    http://english.alarabiya.net/en/perspective/2014/07/13/Egyptians-fear-Islamist-militants-gathering-on-Libyan-border.html

    A few days before he was elected Egypt’s president in May, Abdel Fattah al-Sisi discreetly visited tribesmen living along the border with Libya.

    Tribal leaders there say Sisi, former head of the army, urged them to help Egypt confront what could be a security nightmare for the biggest Arab nation: Islamist militants operating just over the frontier in Libya.

    “Sisi came to us and asked us to stand behind the security forces and army to help them to control the border because what is happening in Libya poses a grave danger to Egypt,” said Mohamed al-Raghi, a tribal chief.

    Wearing a flowing white robe and a traditional black cap outside a mosque in the border town of Salloum, Raghi said he and other tribal leaders had assured Sisi they would help him.

    Chaos in Libya has allowed militants to set up makeshift training camps only a few kilometers from Egypt’s border, according to Egyptian security officials.

    The militants, those officials say, harbor ambitions similar to the al-Qaeda breakaway group that has seized large swathes of Iraq; they want to topple Sisi and create a caliphate in Egypt.

    A state security officer in Salloum said Egyptian authorities see a threat in Libya because of instability that stretches from the border to the town of Derna, an Islamist and al Qaeda hotspot a few hundred kilometers away.

    “We know of three camps in the Libyan desert of Derna which are close to the Egyptian border where hundreds of militants are being trained,” said a state security officer in Salloum.

    The official is in charge of a unit that monitors militants through informants, including bedouins and agents who have penetrated the camps.

    “Those militants are sympathetic to different organizations including the Islamic State (formerly known as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant). Others are Muslim Brotherhood fugitives who are on the run from death sentences they received in Egypt.

    They train on a daily basis in how to use weapons,” he said.

    The Brotherhood renounced violence decades ago and says it has no links to violent militant groups. Libyan officials denied the existence of camps, and U.S. sources said the Egyptians may be overestimating the scale of the threat.

    However, Egyptian security officials believe the militants in Libya - who they say include Egyptians, Syrians, Palestinians and Afghans - are a serious threat to Egypt, a strategic U.S. ally that has a peace treaty with Israel and controls the Suez Canal waterway, a vital global shipping route.

    While Egypt has put down internal insurgencies in the past, the threat from militants in Libya may prove more problematic.

    According to security sources, the men in Libya are trying to join forces with Egypt’s most lethal militant group, Ansar Bayt al-Maqdis, which is based in the Sinai Peninsula on the other side of Egypt, near the border with Israel.

  • Egypte : Alors qu’il a imposé des taxes inédites et demandé un effort à tous les citoyens, Sissi augmente les pensions militaires de 10% - Daily News Egypt

    http://www.dailynewsegypt.com/2014/07/11/al-sisi-raises-military-pensions-10

    President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi issued a decree Thursday amending articles of the law governing the retirement of military men, raising the military pension by 10%.

    Starting from the 1July, military pensions increased by 10% without a minimum or maximum pension rate, reported state-run Al-Ahram. According to the newly issued decree, the pension subject to increase is the sum of both the original pension allocated to military men as well as the bonus pensions.

    A lire sur @OrientXXI La drôle de guerre éco de Sissi http://orientxxi.info/magazine/la-drole-de-guerre-economique-du,0632

  • Egypte Discours du président Sissi sur les hausses des taxes et le terrorisme à l’occasion de la commémoration de la guerre contre Israël I Mada Masr

    http://www.madamasr.com/content/sisi-addresses-lifting-fuel-subsidies-october-6-anniversary-speech

    President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi defended his latest decision to partially lift fuel subsidies in a speech on the Ramadan anniversary of the October 6 War, calling on Egyptians to restore the spirit of these times.

    The Egyptian people faced a lot of pain and suffering between the June 1967 defeat and victory in the October 1973 War, Sisi said, adding that the people were a fundamental partner in the victory due to the dire economic conditions they endured.

  • Sisi « regrets » #Egypt jailing of Jazeera journalists
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/sisi-regrets-egypt-jailing-jazeera-journalists

    Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi said he wished three jailed #Al_Jazeera journalists including an Australian had never been tried, in an expression of regret relatives described as encouraging on Monday. Australian Peter Greste, Canadian-Egyptian Mohammed Fahmy and Egyptian Baher Mohammed were sentenced to between seven and 10 years in jail on charges of defaming Egypt and aiding banned Islamists, in a ruling that sparked a global outcry and demands for a presidential pardon. read more

    #Abdel_Fatah_al-Sisi

  • Egypt : State institutions reject maximum wage | Mada Masr
    6th of July

    http://www.madamasr.com/content/state-institutions-reject-maximum-wage

    Several state-owned institutions have objected to the implementation of a maximum wage in the public sector, a measure that was stipulated in a law amended by President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi on Thursday.

    According to the law, the net income for all state employees should not exceed 35 times the minimum wage, thus capping it at LE42,000 per month. The law applies to all government employees, as well as employees in state-owned companies, advisors and other non-contractual state workers. The law only excludes expenses such as travel and housing allowance from the maximum wage, while all bonuses and incentives are to remain within the set limit.

    The law also excludes diplomatic missions and other state employees representing Egypt abroad from its stipulations.

    On Sunday, employees at the head branch of Al-Ahly National Bank closed the branch protesting the decision.

    Quoting judicial sources, state-owned Al-Ahram also reported that judges at the State Council and State Lawsuits Authority refused to allow the Central Auditing Agency access to a database of their salaries, which allegedly surpass the maximum wage. According to the sources, the judges in these institutions get assigned to work in different ministries, and earn a much higher salary.

    According to Al-Masry Al-Youm, there is also resistance to the law in the petrol and communication sectors, where the wages of several executives surpass LE200,000.

    The new maximum and minimum wages are meant to enforce Article 27 of the 2014 Constitution, which stipulates that “the economic system is socially obliged to equal opportunities, fair distribution of development returns, decreasing the differences between wages, the commitment to a minimum wage that grants good living standards, and a maximum wage to all state actors according to the law.”

    The minimum wage was set at LE1,200 per month by former Prime Minister Hazem al-Beblawi’s Cabinet.

  • Juste avant le verdict contre les journalistes d’Al Jazeera, le Premier ministre australien félicitait Sisi pour la répression des Frères musulmans (tout en appelant à la clémence pour le ressortissant australien) : Peter Greste trial : Tony Abbott appeals to Abdel Fattah al-Sisi to release Australian Al Jazeera journalist
    https://au.news.yahoo.com/a/24291475/peter-greste-trial-julie-bishop-pushes-for-australian-al-jazeera-jour

    "I congratulated him on the work that the new government of Egypt had done to crack down on the Muslim Brotherhood, which is, if you like, the spiritual author and father of some of these even more radical groups.