Yahoo – AFP,
Mona Salem, 15 March 2015
Sharm el
Sheikh (Egypt) (AFP) - Egypt has agreed $36.2 billion (34.5 billion euros) in
investment deals, Prime Minister Ibrahim Mahlab said Sunday at the close of a
three-day conference to kick start the economy.
The
conference, which started with three Arab states pledging $12 billion in
investments and aid, is seen by the government as a ringing endorsement of
President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and his fight against Islamist militants.
"Direct
investment contracts that were signed are worth $36.2 billion," Mahlab
announced at the end of the conference in the Red Sea resort town of Sharm
el-Sheikh.
He added
that Egypt also undertook 18.6 billion in financed projects such as for a power
plant that the country would repay.
Egypt also
won $5.2 billion in loans from international institutions, he said.
"It is
for us now to work and sweat," Mahlab said.
The deals
include a record investment by British Petroleum and its Russian partner DEA of
$12 billion in Egyptian gas fields on the West Nile Delta.
German
conglomerate Siemens signed a four-billion-euro power deal with Egypt, a
company spokesman said Saturday.
![]() |
Egyptian
Prime Minister Ibrahim Mahlab speaks to the press at the Egypt
Economic Development
conference on March 13, 2015, in the Red Sea resort
of Sharm el-Sheikh (AFP
Photo/Khaled Desouki)
|
Egypt also
announced it had signed memorandums of understanding with an United Arab
Emirates company for the construction of a new administrative capital.
At a speech
earlier on Sunday, an ebullient Sisi addressed a cheering audience at the
conference, surrounded by a group of youths he had called up to the stage.
"Egypt
needs no less than $200 or $300 billion for there to truly be hope for 90
million Egyptians," Sisi said.
He added
that he wanted to host such a conference every year and invite other countries
who are facing economic difficulties.
The beaming
president also mentioned that German Chancellor Angela Merkel had invited him for
a visit.
The remark
underscored the acceptance he has won since overthrowing his Islamist
predecessor Mohamed Morsi in 2013, then winning an election amid a broad
crackdown on the opposition.
Bulwark
against jihadists
Morsi's
overthrow by then army chief Sisi unleashed the deadliest crackdown on the
opposition in Egypt in decades, and left thousands in prisons.
Militants
have conducted an insurgency in the Sinai Peninsula that killed scores of
policemen and soldiers, and there have been regular small bombings in Cairo.
In Egypt,
Sisi is popular among many who believe the country needs a tough leader, and he
is staunchly backed by Gulf Arab states who despise Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood
movement which has branches across the region.
Sisi has
called for building a unified Arab force to fight the Islamic State group that
has captured territory in Iraq and Syria, and which commands an affiliate in
Egypt.
Cairo has
already carried out air strikes against the jihadist group inside neighbouring
Libya, where IS also appears to have gained a foothold.
Sisi, who
has positioned himself as a bulwark against jihadists, had said investing in
the Arab world's most populous country would help stabilise the entire region.
On the
first day of the conference, attended by global political and business leaders,
Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates pledged $4 billion each in
investment aid to Egypt.
Most of the
funds will be invested in projects while $3 billion will be deposited in
Egypt's Central Bank.
EU ministers agree on (315 billion-euro) investment plan details
China to allocate more foreign aid for Silk Road countries
Related Articles:
EU ministers agree on (315 billion-euro) investment plan details
China to allocate more foreign aid for Silk Road countries



No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.