Tag: Egypt

  • Egypt announces new oil discovery

    Egypt announces new oil discovery

    The Egyptian Ministry of Petroleum and Mineral Resources announced on Thursday that it has discovered a new oil site at the Gulf of Suez.

    Petrogulf Misr joint company discovered the new site on behalf of Egyptian General Petroleum Corporation (EGPC), Pico GOS Petroleum Company Limited and the Egyptian unit of Kuwait Foreign Petroleum Exploration Company (KUFPEC), the ministry said.

    It is estimated to initially produce 2,000 barrels of crude oil per day in the shallow waters of Geisum concession south of the Gulf of Suez.

    Indications showed that the discovery, referred to as GNN-4, contains about 70 million barrels of extractable crude oil, the Egyptian Oil Ministry said in a statement.

    The concession is technically supervised by Ganoub El Wadi Petroleum Holding Co., according to the statement.

    In early June, Egypt announced a new oil discovery made by Borg Al Arab Petroleum Company at Abu Sennan concession in the Western Desert, with a planned daily production rate of 4,100 barrels of crude oil and 18 million cubic feet of natural gas.

    Similarly, in late 2019, the company announced a petroleum discovery in ASH-2 area of the oil-rich Abu Sennan, with an average production rate of 7,000 barrels of crude oil and 10 million cubic feet of natural gas per day.

    However, Egypt witnessed a seven per cent increase in oil and gas production in 2019 by producing some 650,000 barrels of crude oil and 7.2 billion cubic feet of natural gas per day.

    Egypt’s largest Zohr offshore gas field in the Mediterranean Sea, which was discovered by Italy’s giant, Eni in 2015, greatly contributes to the country’s natural gas production as it produces alone about 2.7 billion cubic feet daily.

  • COVID-19: Wife of Nigerian patient stranded abroad cry for help

    COVID-19: Wife of Nigerian patient stranded abroad cry for help

    Mrs Sadiya Salisu, wife of Mas’ud Salisu, a Nigerian patient stranded in Egypt has called for the Federal Government’s intervention to facilitate his return home.

    Salisu, who travelled to Egypt for medical treatment was stranded due to flight restrictions occasioned by the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Wife of the patient, Sadiya made the call in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria, in Sokoto on Sunday.

    Salisu said her husband, who is a staff of one of the Federal Government agencies in Sokoto, had been in Egypt for the past 40-days, after completing his routine medical treatment.

    She noted that her spouse and other Nigerians were affected by the restriction of flights and stranded in Egypt.

    Salisu alleged that her husband along side other stranded Nigerians had made contacts with the Nigerian Mission in Egypt, lamenting that their efforts proved abortive.

    According to her, her husband is in dire condition in Egypt due to the present predicament.

    While commending President Muhammadu Buhari and Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mr Geoffrey Onyeama, for the repatriation of Nigerians abroad, Salisu urged the government to extend the gesture to Nigerians stranded in Egypt and other countries.

    Also commenting, a relative of the stranded patient, Habibu Malumfashi, disclosed that Salisu left the county through the Malam Aminu Kano International Airport, after an arrangement with an Egyptian hospital for medical treatment.

    Malumfashi said his brother and other stranded Nigerians in Egypt were hassled by the daily financial challenges.

    ”Many of the stranded persons are broke and incurred high hotel and hospital bills due to the prolonged stay in a foreign land,” he said.

    Recall that the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Geoffrey Onyeama had earlier said about 4, 000 Nigerians stranded abroad due to COVID-19 pandemic, are willing to return home.

    The government had so far repatriated hundreds of Nigerians stranded in the U.S. and other countries.

  • Another patient dies of COVID-19

    Another patient dies of COVID-19

    Egypt’s Health Ministry has confirmed the first death of a German citizen from the new coronavirus in the country.

    The ministry’s spokesman Khaled Megahed said in a statement the 60-year-old man landed in Egypt one week ago and showed symptoms of high temperature after he arrived in Hurghada from the city of Luxor.

    The spokesman said the man went to a hospital in Hurghada on Friday, where he tested positive for the coronavirus.

    The man was put under intensive care, as he was suffering from respiratory failure caused by an acute pneumonia, the spokesman said.

    The man refused to be moved to another hospital for quarantine.

    His condition deteriorated, and he died on Sunday.

  • Just in: Egypt detects 12 new Coronavirus cases on Nile cruise boat

    Just in: Egypt detects 12 new Coronavirus cases on Nile cruise boat

    Egypt’s health ministry said it registered 12 people carrying the coronavirus on a Nile cruise ship heading to the southern city of Aswan from Luxor, state television reported on Friday.

    The country had until now diagnosed three people with the virus, one of whom it said had fully recovered after receiving treatment.

    Health ministry spokesman Khaled Megahed said the detection came after information from WHO that a Taiwanese-American tourist, who was on board the cruise, had tested positive after returning home.

    Megahed said the ministry has followed up on medical conditions of those who were in contact with the tourist over the past fourteen days and they did not show any symptoms.

    However, the 12 cases, all Egyptian workers on the ship, tested positive after a PCR test was carried out following the conclusion of the 14-day incubation period.

    The 12 cases have been referred to an isolation hospital, with others believed to be in contact with them currently placed in quarantine for 14 days, to follow up on their health conditions.

    Friday’s announcement comes one day after Egypt announced the first confirmed case in the country of an Egyptian, a recent returnee from Europe.

    The two previous cases were both foreign nationals; one has since recovered.

    John Jabbour, the WHO representative in Egypt, said the detection of the cases confirms the efficiency of Egypt’s preventive plan to combat the disease and deal with infected cases following their detection.

    He praised Egypt’s transparency and fast response in notifying the WHO about the cases, the statement said.

  • Nasser, the good, Sadat, the bad and Mubarak, the ugly – Owei Lakemfa

    By Owei Lakemfa

    Revolution came to Egypt in the Free Officers uniform of Abdel Gamal Nasser, reversal in the turncoat of Anwar Sadat’s crass opportunism and its betrayal in the garb of Hosni Mubarak’s autocracy. The threesome ruled Egypt for fifty five years. Nasser for fourteen tumultuous years from 1956 during which the country underwent fundamental socio-cultural changes, withstood an invasion by combined French, British and Israeli military, an era that ended with an heart attack that killed him. Sadat who was in power for eleven years from 1970 started with the threat to continue the Nasser legacy of anti-imperialism and fight for social justice in the Palestine but ended with his betrayal of the revolution and his movie-like assassination.

    Mubarak, ruled from 1981 for three decades before a bloody popular revolt hurled him from power to prison. His death this Tuesday, February 26, brings to a close, the revolutionary era in Egypt which began with the July 22-26, 1952 Free Officers coup that overthrew King Farouk. The Officers Movement founded by Nasser and headed by General Muhammad Naguib blamed the monarchy for the country’s grinding poverty and poor performance in the in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.

    Political parties and the Muslim Brotherhood organization were banned and replaced with the Liberation Rally party. In November, 1954, the revolution consumed its head, General Naguib who was dismissed from office and placed under house arrest. The country had no President until 1956 when Nasser stepped in and the era of Nasserism began with Nasserites not just taking over the levelers of power in Egypt but in some other countries.

    In 1958, the Free Officers Movement overthrew the Iraqi government. Next was their overthrow of the Syrian government in 1963 and the 1969 Libyan coup d’état led by Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, which overthrew King Idris I.

    In defining the Egyptian revolution, Nasser said: “There is no longer a way out of our present situation except by forging a road toward our objective, violently and by force, over a sea of blood and under a horizon blazing with fire.”

    On the Palestinian Question, he argued: “Our path to Palestine will not be covered with a red carpet or with yellow sand. Our path to Palestine will be covered with blood… In order that we may liberate Palestine, the Arab nations must unite, the Arab armies must unite, and a unified plan of action must be established.”

    In the quest to develop Egypt, Nasser told the developed world: “We’re a sentimental people. We like a few kind words better than millions of dollars given in a humiliating way.”

    Egypt needed funds for development, to tackle mass poverty and fund fundamental projects like the Aswan High Dam, but the Europeans continued to dominate and exploit its economy including control of the Suez Canal. In a bold move, Nasser on July 26, 1956, nationalized the canal and turned it into a huge income earner for Egypt. For this and other perceived aggressive acts of the Egyptian government, France, Britain and Israel formed an alliance to invade Egypt, seize the canal and Cairo, and overthrow the Nasser government.

    Israel on October 29, 1956 began the invasion and two days later, the two other countries under the pretext of defending the canal, made amphibious landings and air strikes. However, most countries including the United Nations condemned the invasion and under pressure, the aggression ceased and the invasion was abandoned. The Nasser government took full control of the Canal and used the revenue from it to build the dam which was completed in January 1968.

    The government carried out extensive land reforms and played pivotal roles in building the Non-Aligned Movement. Perhaps Nasser’s greatest challenge was the Six-Day War in which Israel destroyed the bulk of the Egyptian Airforce whose aircrafts were virtual sitting ducks on the ground. Over 3,000 Egyptian soldiers were also killed and the Israelis captured swaths of Palestinian, Egyptian and Syrian territories.

    This defeat and endless internal squabbles in the Arab world must have put a lot of strain on Nasser who had a heart attack and died on September 29, 1970.

    Anwar al-Sadat was one of the earliest students of the military school created in 1936 in Egypt. On graduation, he met Nasser at his posting and they developed long lasting friendship. Both were members of the young officers movement who wanted to decolonize their country. Sadat was jailed twice for his political activities and after his second term in prison, he left the army and went into business. While he was in prison, the Free Officers Movement had grown fast, and on July 23, 1952, it overthrew the monarchy. Sadat joined the new government as Information Minister. When Nasser passed away, Sadat replaced him. He displayed flashes of the Nasser revolutionary and daring spirit which saw him carry out the October 6, 1973 attack on Israel retaking some of the occupied lands.

    But soon, he began to reverse Nasser’s anti-imperialist policies, made Egypt a stooge of the United States, repressed civil society, ran an inept economic system and in the name of peace, traded away Palestinian and Arab rights. Sadat in 1978 signed the Camp David Accords with Israel. For this, he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace. Simultaneously, he abolished basic rights including that to protest. He also tried to play the religious card by imposing Sharia on the country. But that did not save him from being assassinated by alleged Islamic fundamentalists.

    Mubarak was standing next to Sadat when the assassins rained bullets on the later. He survived just as he survived six other assassination attempts including one on June 26, 1995 in Addis Ababa when he arrived for the African Union Summit. That was the last time Mubarak attended any African meeting. A fighter pilot, he became Vice President in 1975. As President, Mubarak denied Egyptians basic rights like those to assembly, free speech and subjecting them to detention without trial. He named no Vice President until the dying days of his regime when he appointed spy chief, Omar Suleiman. That was on January 29, 2011. Thirteen days later, Suleiman announced Mubarak’s resignation following mass street protests, and power was turned over to the military. Mubarak was subsequently tried and given life. In March 2017, he was freed from prison aged 88. Today, Egypt has settled into a familiar pattern of dictatorship, intolerance, subservience to foreign powers, repression and decay.

  • BREAKING: Former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak dies at 91

    Hosni Mubarak, Egypt’s president for almost 30 years who stepped down after a popular revolution in 2011, has died. He was 91.

    Mubarak served as Egypt’s fourth president starting in 1981 until his ouster in what became known as the Arab Spring revolution.

    He was jailed for years after the uprising, but was freed in 2017 after being acquitted of most charges.

    Mubarak died weeks after undergoing surgery.

    Aljazeera reports that his brother-in-law, General Mounir Thabet, told AFP news agency, he passed away at Cairo’s Galaa military hospital.

    Throughout his rule, he was a stalwart US ally, a bullwark against armed groups, and guardian of Egypt’s peace with Israel. But to the tens of thousands of young Egyptians who rallied for 18 days of unprecedented street protests in Cairo’s central Tahrir Square and elsewhere in 2011, Mubarak was a relic, a latter-day pharaoh.

    Mubarak was born in a rural village in the Nile Delta in 1928. He left behind a complicated legacy as his rule was partly characterised by corruption, police brutality, political repression, and entrenched economic problems.

    He joined the Egyptian air force in 1949, graduating as a pilot the following year.

    He rose through the ranks to become the commander-in-chief of the Egyptian air force in 1972.

    Mubarak became a national hero the following year with reports that the Egyptian air force dealt a substantial blow to Israeli forces in Sinai during the Yom Kippur War.

    His harsh stance on security enabled him to maintain the peace treaty with Israel.

    Under his rule, Egypt remained a key United States ally in the region – receiving $1.3bn a year in US military aid by 2011.

    Mubarak is survived by his wife, Suzanne, and his sons, Gamal and Alaa.

  • Africa in trouble: Coronavirus lands in Egypt

    Africa in trouble: Coronavirus lands in Egypt

    The dreaded and deadly Coronavirus has landed in Egypt, the country’s Health Ministry said on Friday.

    The ministry said it has a confirmed case of the novel coronavirus.

    The sufferer was not Egyptian, the ministry said in a statement, without specifying the nationality.

    “The ministry has taken preventative measures and is monitoring the patient… who is stable,” said health ministry spokesman Khaled Megahed.

    According to AFP, Egyptian authorities had notified the World Health Organization and the patient been placed in quarantined isolation in hospital.

    The death toll from the epidemic virus has neared 1,400 cases, almost exclusively in China where it was first identified.

    Deep trade links with China and often overstretched healthcare systems have raised concerns about the capacity of African countries to respond to an outbreak.

    Earlier this month, Egypt suspended all flights on its national carrier to China. They will remain grounded until the end of the month.

    Three hundred and one Egyptians were evacuated from Wuhan, epicentre of the virus in China, and have remained in quarantine for 14 days, AFP reports.

  • Volleyball: Egypt beat Nigeria in Olympic qualifier

    Volleyball: Egypt beat Nigeria in Olympic qualifier

    Egypt’s women volleyball team on Tuesday defeated their Nigerian counterparts 3-0 in their second game at the ongoing 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games qualifiers in Yaoundé, Cameroon.

    Egypt won all the three sets of the crucial match on the third day of the competition.

    The Egyptian ladies won 25-11 in the first set, 25-12 in the second and 25-13 in the last set to make the final scoreline 3-0.

    The loss has now dimmed hopes of qualification for the 2020 Olympics by the Nigerian side.

    Nigeria will face Botswana on Wednesday and Kenya on Thursday at the qualifiers.

    The 2020 Olympic qualifiers which started on Sunday is expected to end on Thursday.

  • 2020 Olympic Qualifiers : Egypt beat Nigeria 3-0 in volleyball competition

    Egypt’s women volleyball team on Tuesday defeated their Nigerian counterparts 3-0 in their second game at the ongoing 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games qualifiers in Yaoundé, Cameroon.

    Recall that Egypt won all the three sets of the crucial match on the third day of the competition.

    The Egyptian ladies won 25-11 in the first set, 25-12 in the second and 25-13 in the last set to make the final scoreline 3-0.

    The loss has now dimmed hopes of qualification for the 2020 Olympics by the Nigerian side.

    NAN reports that Nigeria will still face Botswana on Wednesday and Kenya on Thursday at the qualifiers.

    The 2020 Olympic qualifiers which started on Sunday is expected to end on Thursday.

  • Buhari returns to Abuja after Egypt trip

    President Muhammadu Buhari has returned to Abuja after he participated in the Aswan Forum for Sustainable Peace and Development in Africa, held in Egypt.

    News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the presidential aircraft conveying the president and some members of his entourage landed at the Presidential wing of the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, at about 2.30pm.

    At the opening of the forum on Dec. 11, President Buhari maintained that the resolution of conflict situations in African countries had remained a key component in the overall development of the continent.

    The Nigerian leader said: “As Africans it is important to focus on the issues of conflict prevention and resolution. Conflicts have devastating effects on our societies and they militate against our progress. In this regard, the need to silence the guns cannot be overemphasized.”

    President Buhari equally emphasized that massive investment in transportation infrastructure was necessary for African economic resurgence as this would facilitate the African Free Trade Area Agreement recently signed on by the continental leaders.

    “Africa should embark on the provision of transport connectivity by enhancing the development of roads, rail, and air links which will ease the free movement of persons, goods and services within the continent.

    ”In this regard, we in Nigeria have already commenced an aggressive drive to upgrade our rail transport system and road networks across the country.

    “We should furthermore promote free trade within and amongst Africa and Africans especially now that we have launched the African Free Trade Area Agreement,” he said.

    The President also held bilateral talks with his Egyptian counterpart Abdelfattah el-Sisi where both leaders pledged to collaborate to eradicate the menace of terrorism in parts of Africa.

    President Buhari and el-Sisi met on the sidelines of the Aswan Forum on Sustainable Peace and Development in Africa taking place in Egypt.