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Tuesday, June 10, 2014
Egypt puts Sinai's Al-Arish port under military control

Egypt puts Sinai's Al-Arish port under military control
Egypt's interim president has transferred the assets of a port in north
Sinai to the armed forces for security reasons before leaving office
Reuters, Tuesday 10 Jun 2014
http://english.ahram.org.eg/NewsContent/3/12/103344/Business/Economy/Egypt-puts-Sinais-AlArish-port-under-military-cont.aspx

Egypt has transferred the assets of the Al-Arish port in the Sinai Peninsula
from a civilian-run agency to the armed forces, citing national security
reasons in an area where militant attacks have increased in the past year.

The decision was made last week by then-interim President Adly Mansour but
only announced on Monday, a day after former army chief Abdel Fattah
al-Sisi - who ousted Islamist President Mohamed Mursi last July - was sworn
in as the new head of state.

The move seemed likely to reinforce critics' concern that Egypt is returning
to strongman rule three years after a popular uprising raised hopes of
democracy free from military influence.

An addendum to Thursday's official gazette declared that the state's assets
in the Al-Arish port and its administration were transferred to the ministry
of defense and war production from the Port Authority of Port Said.

"Egypt's national security requires that the port be under the control of
the armed forces due to its sensitive location," the head of the Port
Authority of Port Said, retired major general Ahmed Sharaf, told Reuters by
telephone.

The military could not be reached immediately for comment on the port, a
valuable installation in the Sinai Peninsula amid the militant attacks on
police and soldiers there.

Sharaf said the port's employees were working as usual but said he did not
know if the armed forces would supplement the workers or replace them.

Sisi won the loyalty of state institutions and the media after toppling
Mursi, and much of his popularity stems from his roots in the military,
whose decades-long pattern of rule was interrupted by the Muslim Brotherhood
leader's year in office.

But his election also triggered fears among some Egyptians that the
military, with a budget shielded from public oversight and a wide-ranging
business empire, would continue its dominant role in the country's economic
and political life.

Sisi said during his campaign that he would not hesitate to use the military
to help rebuild an economy racked by three years of political turmoil, which
has driven away foreign investors and tourists.

An army-linked company run by a retired army officer was named on Saturday
as the contractor for the first phase of a UAE-funded project to build 25
wheat silos in Egypt.

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