Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi made 13 changes to his cabinet, including appointing a new Public Enterprises minister, CBC television reported, as the North African country grapples with pressing economic challenges.
(Bloomberg) — Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi made 13 changes to his cabinet, including appointing a new Public Enterprises minister, CBC television reported, as the North African country grapples with pressing economic challenges.
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Mahmoud Kamal Esmat was named in the Public Enterprises portfolio as Egypt seeks to attract investment in state-owned companies and generate funds. El-Sisi made no changes to the finance, energy, defense or foreign minister posts.
Soaring oil and commodity prices have hit one of the world’s largest wheat importers hard, as has the loss of tourists from Russia and Ukraine. The conflict has put pressure on Egypt’s currency and prompted it to seek International Monetary Fund assistance to bolster one of the Arab world’s key economies.
Here are the other cabinet appointments reported by CBC:
Hany Atef Nabhan — Irrigation and Water Resources
Ahmed Issa Taha Issa — Tourism and Antiquities
Ahmed Samir Mahmoud — Industry
Mohamed Abas Helmy — Civil Aviation
Mohamed Salah El-Den – Military Production
Reda Hegazy — Education
Khalid Abdel Ghafar — Health
Mohamed Ayman Ahmed — Higher Education
Soha Samir — Immigration
Hassan Mohamed Hassan — Manpower
Neven Yosef — Culture
Hesham Abdel Ghany — Domestic Development
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Egypt is seeking to raise $41 billion to pay for its current account deficit and maturing debt by the end of 2023, with financing from Gulf neighbors potentially crucial. On Aug. 10, a unit of Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund scooped up state-owned stakes in four Egyptian publicly listed companies for $1.3 billion, as part of the kingdom’s commitment to channel resources.
“I called on the parliament to discuss the amendment of a number of ministerial portfolios to develop the government’s performance in some public files at the internal and external levels, which contribute to protecting the interests of the state and its capabilities and directly affect the services provided to the Egyptian citizen, for which we all work,” El-Sisi said in a Facebook post.
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