Archive for Egyptian officials

The International Monetary Fund's board will require there is no major change in economic outlook or policy when it considers approving a US$4.8 billion loan to Egypt, an IMF spokesperson said.

The loan deal was agreed in principle this month with an IMF team in Cairo and the board is expected to meet to finalize the facility on 19 December.

Spokesperson Wafa Amr's remarks were made in an emailed response to questions about whether President Mohamed Morsy's decree to extend his powers would threaten the preliminary loan deal, seen as vital to rebuilding confidence in Egypt's economy.

His decree has set off a wave of protests and violence.

"Consideration of the agreement by the IMF Executive Board will require that there is no major change in the economic outlook and implementation plans," Amr said.

Egyptian officials have not indicated any shift in economic plans that include reining in the budget deficit from about 11 percent of gross domestic product in 2011/12 to 8.5 percent in the financial year that ends in June 2014.

When the preliminary agreement was reached, a member of the IMF team involved in the negotiations said he expected it would be approved by the board.

"The staff-level agreement on financial support from the IMF is based on the economic and social policies that the government plans to implement under its program," Amr said in reference to the initial loan deal that was announced on 20 November.

Amr said implementing those plans included passing a revised budget for 2012/13 that reflected planned tax and spending measures.

She said it also required "assurances from Egypt's bilateral and multilateral partners regarding their expected provision of program financing".

The IMF deal is expected to encourage investors and support from other nations for Egypt, whose economy has been hammered by political unrest since Hosni Mubarak was overthrown in 2011.

On the budget, Egypt initially forecast a deficit of about 8 percent of GDP for 2012/13, which economists said at the time of publication was optimistic. Since then, officials have said that target could not be met because reforms it was based on had not been implemented.

Egypt said it would issue a supplementary budget once a deal with the IMF was reached, and Planning and International Cooperation Minister Ashraf al-Araby said on Saturday the deficit for 2012/13 was now expected to be 10 percent of GDP.

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(Others) – Egyptian officials plan to create a live, round-the-clock video broadcast of the country’s main touristic areas in a project called ‘Egypt Now’, to help persuade tourists to visit the country, Egypt’s Minister of Tourism Hisham Zaazou said on Sunday.
Once a flourishing industry, tourism in Egypt has been struggling since a popular uprising in 2011 forced former president Hosni Mu

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A Hamas government delegation will hold talks Monday with Egyptian officials in Gaza to follow up on the recently declared truce between the movement and Israel.

The delegation, presided over by Deputy Prime Minister Zeyad al-Zaza, arrived in Cairo Sunday evening to hold indirect talks with Israel through Egyptian mediators over details of the truce.

Deputy Foreign Minister Ghazi Hamad told the local Safa news agency that the delegation includes Kamel Madi, a deputy from the Gazan interior ministry, and Hatem Eweida, a deputy from the economic ministry. During a meeting Monday, the delegation will discuss some truce-related details including borders, crossings and mechanisms of getting goods in and out of Gaza.

Negotiations with Israelis will be indirect and sponsored by Egypt, Hamad said. 

Egypt announced Wednesday that it had brokered a cease-fire agreement between Hamas and Israel, putting an end to the most recent conflict between the two, which killed at least 165 Palestinians and six Israelis.

The agreement included halting mutual military attacks between Israel and the armed Palestinian factions in Gaza, as well as opening the commercial borders.

Israel diminished its maritime siege on Gaza by increasing the distance allowed for fishing to six miles. The distance has been reduced to three miles for five years.

It also allowed farmers to reach the fence separating Gaza, after imposing a 300-meter-deep security buffer zone three years ago.

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Arab League and United Nations envoy to Syria Lakhdar Brahimi arrived in Cairo from Kuwait Tuesday to discuss developments in Syria with Egyptian officials.

Sources in the delegation that received Brahimi said that he would meet with Egyptian government and Arab League officials, as well as with UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.

Brahimi will also meet with Syrian opposition figures, including Moaz al-Khatib, president of the Syrian National Coalition for Revolutionary and Opposition Forces, to discuss recent developments and next steps.

The visit comes as part of Brahimi’s regional trip, which included stops in Kuwait and the UAE to discuss the situation in Syria.

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European Union foreign ministers will begin three days of meetings with Egyptian officials on Monday, under the chairmanship of the EU High Commissioner for Foreign and Security Affairs, Catherine Ashton, according to the head of the EU delegation to Egypt.

At a press conference in Cairo on Wednesday, delegation head James Moran said the meetings would be the most important for Egyptian-European relations since the 25 January revolution.

“There is much to be done now since Egypt is still in transition and trying to write a new constitution,” he said. “The EU will do all it can to support Egypt’s economy and civil society.”

Moran said 80 percent of all direct investments in Egypt come from the EU.

“We are therefore interested in increasing investments, creating more jobs and contributing to the success of the democratic process in Egypt,” he said.

He also said the EU will do its best to protect women in Egypt and prevent harassment, praising Egyptian youth for protecting women in the streets. “We have a four-million-euro program for the protection of women's rights,” he said.

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The US assistant defense secretary for international security affairs arrived in Cairo Sunday, leading a delegation on a four-day visit to discuss bilateral cooperation, specifically in Sinai security, with Egyptian officials.

Derek Chollet, the assistant defense secretary, is expected to discuss ways the US can help the Egyptian government battle militant groups in Sinai, secure its border with Israel and prevent weapons smuggling.

Disorder has spread in Sinai since autocratic President Hosni Mubarak was ousted in a popular uprising early last year, with Islamist militants stepping up attacks on security forces and the Israeli border. Egypt's newly elected president, former Muslim Brotherhood leader Mohamed Morsy, has pledged to restore security in the poor desert region.

Earlier this month, three policemen were killed by militants in a drive-by shooting in North Sinai. That incident came amid the largest security crackdown Sinai has seen in decades, as officials have hunted the perpetrators of another ambush that killed 16 border guards on 5 August.

Edited translation from DPA

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An October report from IMF’s Tokyo meeting, which Egyptian officials attended, recommends that the government allow the country’s currency to respond to market forces as a short-term policy solution to closing the widening budget deficit.

“Allowing the currency to move in line with market forces — while avoiding excessive short-term volatility — would help protect international reserves and competitiveness, while mobilizing foreign financing on favorable terms could bridge temporary balance of payments gaps,” the report, titled “Arab Countries in Transition: Economic Outlook and Key Challenges,” said.

The Egyptian government is in ongoing discussions with the IMF to secure the US$4.8 billion loan, news outlets reported on Sunday.

The government and the IMF are in agreement that the most pressing economic issue is the growing government deficit, and that it needs to be reduced by at least 20 percent, state-run news service MENA reported.

The only differences in opinion between the delegation and the government is how exactly the deficit should be decreased, with the Egyptian government favoring a progressive income tax and reducing subsidies, a source close to the negotiations told MENA.

The officials said the IMF delegation had approved of the government’s presented plan to streamline subsidies and raise tax revenue at the beginning of the visit last week.

The source also told MENA that the delegation had not alluded to any forced devaluation of the pound in its talks so far.

Meanwhile, the Egyptian pound fell to its lowest value in eight years on the first day in the delegation’s visit. The currency was bid as low as 6.1112 to the US dollar on Wednesday.

Traders told Reuters on Wednesday, that in allowing the pound to depreciate, the government was demonstrating to the IMF that it will be flexible with its currency in the coming period. Many experts say the Egyptian pound has become significantly over-valued against the dollar.

IMF and Egyptian government officials have repeatedly said that currency devaluation is not a condition for receiving the loan.  

In the 12 October report, the IMF also recommended that Egypt implement “a comprehensive and broadly supported economic program that addresses effectively the country’s imbalances,” cut back un-targeted energy subsidies, increase spending on infrastructure, education, and health, streamline burdensome regulations, and improve access to financing, especially for small enterprises.

Experts say that despite the progressing talks, much about the government’s economic reform plan remains unclear, saying officials have offered sparse explanation for how they will tackle the country’s economic predicament.

The government has yet to show, for example, how it will go about cutting subsidies.

“There are existing contracts between industry and the government, and officials have said there would be no retroactive implementation of this decision,” said Angus Blair, founder of The Signet Institute, a Cairo-based think-tank on MENA economies.  “It’s unclear how they’re going to deal with this.”

Blair said officials and experts who say the loan will signal a turning point in the country’s economic recovery are off-base.

“It depends on the structure of the package of measures being proposed," he said.

He’s not so optimistic that an agreement with Egypt and the IMF will reflect positively on the market.  

“Reality will hit, and serious action needs to be taken to induce domestic confidence,” he said.

The market mirrored Blair’s concerns on Sunday, with the EGX 30 index dropping 2.24 percent.

He also sees the government’s quietly allowing the pound to fall as not entirely reassuring.

“I would rather they had done it as part of a package to restore confidence,” he said.

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UN and Arab League envoy to Syria Lakhdar Brahimi arrived in Cairo Thursday for a two-day visit for talks with local officials.

Brahimi is expected to meet with Arab League Chief Nabil al-Araby and a number of Egyptian officials to discuss the results of his visits to Russia and China, as well as developments in Syria after the failure of the truce he called for over Eid.

During his visit to China, Brahimi emphasized the need to stop the violence in Syria as soon as possible and to find a political solution to the crisis.

China and Russia are Syria's key allies and have vetoed three UN Security Council resolutions backed by Western and Arab countries to hold the Syrian regime responsible for the violence.

Brahimi urged China to play an active role in stopping the violence. The special envoy is expected to present new proposals for a settlement to the Security Council this month following consultations with both regional and international parties.

During its meeting on Wednesday, the Egyptian government reviewed a Foreign Ministry report on the situation in Syria. Cabinet spokesperson Alaa al-Hadidy said that the government regrets the continuing violence and killing in Syria as it follows up on the crisis there.

Hadidy said the government had hoped that Eid al-Adha would be be an opportunity for a truce and added that they hope Brahimi will succeed in his mission to stop the violence and bloodshed in Syria.

Edited translation from MENA

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