Egypt Accuses 2 Former Officials of Wasting $9 Mn

A port affiliated with the General Authority for Land and Dry Ports in Egypt. (Egyptian government)
A port affiliated with the General Authority for Land and Dry Ports in Egypt. (Egyptian government)
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Egypt Accuses 2 Former Officials of Wasting $9 Mn

A port affiliated with the General Authority for Land and Dry Ports in Egypt. (Egyptian government)
A port affiliated with the General Authority for Land and Dry Ports in Egypt. (Egyptian government)

Two former officials at Egypt’s General Authority for Land and Dry Ports have been accused of wasting $9 million by purchasing unnecessary insurance devices for the ports.

The Administrative Prosecution Authority referred the former officials to disciplinary trial.

The former head of the Central Administration of Land Ports of the Authority, and the former chairman of the Board of Directors are alleged to have purchased 188 insurance devices, even though the ports only needed 120. The additional 68 devices were valued at $9 million.

According to a statement, the head of the Administrative Prosecution Authority, Adly Gad, issued his decision after a report from the port authority to determine the responsibility of the Authority’s specialists for purchasing insurance devices.

Each of the two former officials prepared reports claiming the authority needed 188 insurance devices and concluding a contract with a company to purchase them, estimated at over $27 million.

They were also accused of violating the established contracting procedures by not obtaining the approval of the prime minister before concluding the agreement. Additionally, the contracts were written in English, not Arabic, which is also a violation of the applicable regulations.

In an attempt to redress the losses, the Authority agreed with the supplier to cancel the contract 23 devices which were not dispatched and delivered. It returned two devices to the supplier and sold 25 to Egyptian Airports and Cairo Airport.

The Authority was left with 18 devices, worth $2 million.



Official: US Forces Accounted for after Reported Rocket Attack in Baghdad

US vehicles are seen in Ain al-Asad airbase in Anbar, Iraq. Reuters file photo
US vehicles are seen in Ain al-Asad airbase in Anbar, Iraq. Reuters file photo
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Official: US Forces Accounted for after Reported Rocket Attack in Baghdad

US vehicles are seen in Ain al-Asad airbase in Anbar, Iraq. Reuters file photo
US vehicles are seen in Ain al-Asad airbase in Anbar, Iraq. Reuters file photo

Multiple Katyusha rockets were fired near Baghdad International Airport, two Iraqi military officials told Reuters early on Tuesday, but a US official disputed reports that US military forces were targeted in the incident.

"All military personnel are accounted for and military forces were not targeted as had been reported," the US defense official told Reuters, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The incident was a reminder of the soaring tensions in the Middle East, as speculation swirled about whether Iran and Iran-backed groups would make good on threats to retaliate after a series of Israeli major blows against Lebanon's Hezbollah.

Two Iraqi security sources said an initial investigation showed three rockets were fired, including one that landed near buildings used by Iraqi counter-terrorism forces, causing damages and fire to some vehicles but no casualties.

The sources had previously said at least two Katyusha rockets were also fired at a military base hosting US forces and that air defenses intercepted the rockets.

But the US official said Washington was aware of reports of an attack instead on the Baghdad Diplomatic Support Complex, which is a Department of State facility.

"For details about the incident we refer you to the State Department," the official said.

A US Department of State is assessing the damage caused by the attack, according to a spokesperson, who said there were no casualties.