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Top News: In Biggest Deployment Under Peace Treaty, Egypt Army Pushes More Reinforcements into Sinai

EgyptSource | August 09, 2012
APCs August 8

Major military reinforcements arrived to the outskirts of El-Arish in Sinai Thursday morning coming from the Second Field Army Command in Ismailiya. The reinforcements sent to the border city with Israel include armoured vehicles, tanks and missile batteries in addition to hundreds of soldiers.

SECURITY

Renewed clashes hit Egypt's Sinai

[AFP/Ahram Online, Al-Shorouk (Arabic), 8/9/2012] Police and gunmen clashed Thursday in the Sinai town of El-Arish, Egyptian TV said after authorities vowed to crush a surge in Islamist militancy, although the state news agency MENA denied the report. The state-owned Nile News television said there were clashes outside a police station in the north Sinai town a day after reported air strikes killed 20 militants in a neighbouring village. However, MENA said later that a "security official denied reports that the ... police station in El-Arish came under fire," in an account backed by witnesses who said they did not see or hear any clashes.

In biggest deployment under peace treaty, Egypt army pushes more reinforcements into El-Arish, Sinai

[Ahram Online, EGYNews (Arabic), 8/9/2012] Major military reinforcements arrived to the outskirts of El-Arish in Sinai Thursday morning coming from the Second Field Army Command in Ismailiya. The reinforcements sent to the border city with Israel include armoured vehicles, tanks and missile batteries in addition to hundreds of soldiers. The reinforcements come as part of "Operation Eagle," launched in August 2011 and originally aimed at securing vital establishments in Sinai. Since a security vacuum opened in Egypt with the fall of the security apparatus of the Mubarak regime there has been a mutual understanding between Egypt and Israel concerning the necessity of raising the number of Egyptian soldiers in Sinai.

Canadian student arrested in Sinai

[Daily News Egypt, Al-Ahram (Arabic), 8/8/2012]Egyptian police have arrested a Canadian student in Sinai on suspicion of involvement in an ambush that killed 16 soldiers, security officials said on Wednesday. A Canadian embassy official said he could not confirm or deny the arrest, due to privacy reasons. Egyptian security can be suspicious of foreigners and has arrested several over the past year on suspicion of spying or involvement in unrest, eventually releasing them.

GOVERNMENT

Tantawi issues order to appoint Badeen as advisor for Sinai affairs

[El Watan, 8/9/2012] Sources close to Field Marshal Mohamed Tantawi have confirmed that the Minister of Defense and head of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) has issued a decree reinstating former military police chief Hamdi Badeen as advisor to the military for Sinai affairs. Morsi dismissed Badeen yesterday as part of a wider reshuffle of security personnel.

Egypt PM declares new govt's support for army's Sinai clampdown

[Ahram Online, 8/8/2012] At the Egyptian Cabinet's first press conference following its inaugural meeting Wednesday morning, Prime Minister Hisham Qandil pledged the government's full support for Egypt's security forces in their bid to restore order and stability to the restive Sinai Peninsula. Head of Egypt's Supreme Council of the Armed Forces Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi was reportedly unable to attend Wednesday's Cabinet meeting, since he had already held a key meeting with President Mohamed Morsi and Chief of Staff Sami Anan to discuss the latest developments in Sinai.

Thursday morning power cut extends throughout Egypt

[Ahram Online, Al-Ahram (Arabic), 8/9/2012] Despite government promises that pervasive power cuts hitting the country since the start of the fasting month of Ramadan would be brought to an end, Thursday morning saw one the most serious power cuts yet. Lasting for two hours, it spread out throughout the country, affecting the underground Metro, hospitals and even the Cairo Stock Exchange. Shortages in gas and diesel led to a malfunction in the second circuit power plant at El-Asher Men Ramadan, leading to the shut down in different areas in Cairo and other governorates, official sources told the press.

ECONOMY

Egypt urban inflation falls to 6.4 pct in July, lowest level since uprising

[Ahram Online, 8/9/2012] Egypt’s annual urban inflation hit 6.4 per cent in the twelve months to July 2012, according to figures from the Central Agency for Statistics and Mobilisation (CAPMAS). This is the lowest level for the indicator since a popular uprising unseated Hosni Mubarak in February 2011. The inflation figure is down from 7.3 per cent in the year to June, and 8.3 per cent to May. Slowing growth in food prices caused the dwindling rate of inflation. Food items carry the heaviest weight in the inflation index.

North Africa should integrate economies to speed growth: Report

[Ahram Online, 8/9/2012] Better integration of North African economies can have a vital impact on their overall development, claims a new report from the African Development Bank (AFDB). Entitled 'Unlocking North Africa’s potential through regional integration,' the report looks at the key challenges for regional integration in North Africa's six Arab countries: Tunisia, Morocco, Algeria, Egypt, Libya and Mauritania.

SOCIETY

Brotherhood urges reassessment of Camp David, denounces calls for violence

[Ahram Online, 8/9/2012] Ikhwanonline, the official website of the Muslim Brotherhood, released a press statement Wednesday regarding Sunday's Sinai attack, calling for a reassessment of the Camp David treaty. The statement urges the Armed Forces to focus on its sole mission of protecting Egypt and its borders and for the enforcement of a law criminalising corruption and those who seek to incite violence. The group's statement pointed out that some individuals with anti-Egyptian agendas have used the recent attack in Sinai to promote political disputes.

Egyptian columnists protest new chief editor appointments in state owned newspapers

[Ahram Online, Al-Akhbar (Arabic) 8/9/2012] Several Egyptian writers and journalists left their columns blank Thursday in independent newspapers, protesting what they considered an attempt from the Muslim Brotherhood to control state owned newspapers and publications. On Wednesday, the Shura Council announced the names of editors-in-chief of state owned publications. Many journalists reject that the Shura Council hold power of appointment of such head positions, believing this was abused by the ruling party in the past to control the state owned media.

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About EgyptSource

 

EgyptSource, a project of the Rafik Hariri Center for the Middle East, follows Egypt’s transition and provides a platform for Egyptian perspectives on the major issues – economic, political, legal, religious and human rights – that are at stake in the post-Mubarak era.

If you are interested in submitting an article for publication on EgyptSource, please send an inquiry via email with a short outline of your idea. 

The views expressed in EgyptSource are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Atlantic Council, its staff, or its supporters.

 

Follow us on Twitter: @EgyptSource

 

EgyptSource Team

 

Michele Dunne
Director, Rafik Hariri Center 
mdunne@acus.org

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Nancy Messieh
Editor, EgyptSource, MENASource
nmessieh@acus.org 

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Tarek Radwan
Resident Contributor, EgyptSource; Editor, MENASource
tradwan@acus.org

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Faces of Egypt 

 

Journalist and videographer Abanoub Emad explains the drive behind his work: “I want to cover the truth..If it was just a job for me I wouldn't risk my life, but this is what I want to do…and this is what differentiates the quality of work. You can tell who's doing it for the sake of doing it, and who's doing it because it's what they love to do” 

At twenty-two, Amr El Salanekly has won the 2012 Clinton Global Initiative fellowship, co-founded a social incubator and an educational platform for underprivileged kids, turned down a job with Bangladeshi Nobel Laureate Mohammad Yunus’ Grameen Bank, and raised hundreds of thousands of Egyptian pounds for community projects in Egypt.

Check out the rest of the Faces of the New Egypt series here

 

About the Contributors

 

Alaa Al Aswany, the Arab world's bestselling novelist, is the author of The Yacoubian Building, Chicago, and Friendly Fire. His work is published in thirty-one languages worldwide.  Read his EgyptSource posts here

 

Yussef Auf is an Egyptian judge and 2012 Humphrey Fellow at American University’s Washington College of Law. He is currently pursuing a PhD in Constitutional Law and Political Systems at Cairo University. Read his EgyptSource posts here.

 

 

Nadine Abdalla is a PhD Fellow at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP) in Berlin and a writer for Egyptian newspaper, Al-Masry Al-Youm. Read her EgyptSource posts here. 

Amr Hamzawy joined the Department of Public Policy and Administration at the American University in Cairo in 2011, where he continues to serve today. He is a former member of parliament and a member of the National Salvation Front. Read his EgyptSource posts here

Jayson Casper is a writer with Arab West Report, Christianity Today, and Lapido Media. He blogs on Egyptian politics, religion, and culture at A Sense of BelongingRead his EgyptSource posts here.

Wael Eskandar is a blogger and a writer for Egypt's Ahram Online. He has written for publications like Daily News Egypt and Community Times. Read his EgyptSource posts here.

  

Soraya Morayef is a journalist and writer based in Cairo. She blogs under suzeeinthecity.wordpress.comRead her EgyptSource posts here.

Sultan Sooud Al Qassemi is a UAE based political commentator. He tweets as @SultanAlQassemiRead his EgyptSource posts here.

 

Magdy Samaan is a freelance journalist and a 2011 MENA Democracy Fellow at the World Affairs Institute. Read his EgyptSource posts here.

 

Haitham Tabei is a special correspondent for the Washington Post and Asharq Saudi newspaper in Cairo.

Read his EgyptSource posts here.

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