Death Toll from Building Collapse in Alexandria Rises to 10

Façade of the collapsed building in Alexandria. (Egyptian Youth Council page on Facebook)
Façade of the collapsed building in Alexandria. (Egyptian Youth Council page on Facebook)
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Death Toll from Building Collapse in Alexandria Rises to 10

Façade of the collapsed building in Alexandria. (Egyptian Youth Council page on Facebook)
Façade of the collapsed building in Alexandria. (Egyptian Youth Council page on Facebook)

Egyptian civil protection units in their ongoing efforts retrieved another body on Wednesday from the rubble of a 14-storey building that collapsed in Alexandria earlier this week, bringing the total number of casualties to 10 deaths and four injuries.

The units announced Tuesday evening the retrieval of three new victims, a woman, and two men.

Four people, including a paramedic, were injured in the vicinity of the collapsed building that is located on Khalil Hamada Street in the Montazah neighborhood.

The Alexandria Health Affairs Directorate announced that all of the wounded were discharged from the hospital after receiving treatment.

Meanwhile, the Administrative Prosecution Authority summoned on Wednesday the organization manager and the director of engineering in Hay Awal El Montazah to investigate the circumstances of the accident.

Following the examination, the Authority found out that the property had split vertically downward with the collapse of its right side toward the building façade while the left side didn’t collapse, a well-informed local source said.

The Montazah Prosecution Office ordered the detention of the owner of the 14th floor of the collapsed property and the contractor, for four days pending investigations into the charges against them.

The prosecution charged the defendants with three counts of manslaughter and wrongful injury, as well as building without a permit associated with property damage, which caused the collapse of the property and endangered the lives of citizens.

It also ordered the preservation of the property file, in order to clarify the cause of the accident, and the formation of a committee from the Housing Directorate in the governorate to conduct the necessary inspection of the property and examine its file.

Moreover, the Egyptian Youth Council stressed that its cadres and volunteers in Alexandria continue to help in the evacuation and support of the civil protection units.

MP Rawya Mokhtar said on her Facebook page that upon the collapse of the building, she was keen on being present at the site along with volunteers to help the civil protection units and the ambulance.

Governor of Alexandria Mohammed El-Sherif remarked that all relevant bodies were assigned to provide full support for the building residents, totaling around 16 households.

 



Libya’s Parliament Approves Appointment of Belqasem as New Central Bank Governor

Libyan Ministry of Interior personnel stand guard in front of the Central Bank of Libya in Tripoli, Libya, August 27, 2024. (Reuters)
Libyan Ministry of Interior personnel stand guard in front of the Central Bank of Libya in Tripoli, Libya, August 27, 2024. (Reuters)
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Libya’s Parliament Approves Appointment of Belqasem as New Central Bank Governor

Libyan Ministry of Interior personnel stand guard in front of the Central Bank of Libya in Tripoli, Libya, August 27, 2024. (Reuters)
Libyan Ministry of Interior personnel stand guard in front of the Central Bank of Libya in Tripoli, Libya, August 27, 2024. (Reuters)

Libya’s eastern parliament on Monday agreed to appoint Naji Mohamed Issa Belqasem as the new central bank governor after the former governor, Sadiq al-Kabir, was fired last month by the presidential council in the capital, Tripoli.

Parliament spokesperson Abdullah Bliheg said Monday that all 108 lawmakers voted in favor of appointing Belqasem, who previously was the central bank’s director of banking and monetary control.

The parliament also appointed Mari Muftah Rahil Barrasi as his deputy. Belqasem and Barrasi are expected to form a new board of directors for the central bank within 10 days.

The decision came as part of a UN-facilitated agreement between the parliament and the High Council of State to appoint new leadership for the country’s central bank.

Last month, the presidential council issued a decree to appoint Mohamed Abdul Salam al-Shukri, the former deputy governor, as a replacement for al-Kabir. The presidential council in Tripoli is allied with Abdul Hamid Dbeibah’s Tripoli-based Government of National Unity (GNU).

However, the country’s eastern parliament and the Supreme Council of State, an advisory body based in the capital, said removing al-Kabir was was an illegitimate move and that such a decision should have been made in coordination with both bodies. That is according to interim regulations agreed upon during UN-backed talks that help oversee the unity of the country’s institutions.

Al-Kabir served as the central bank’s governor since October 2011, the year when Libya plunged into chaos after a NATO-backed uprising overthrew the country’s longtime leader, Moammar al-Gadhafi.

During the months that led up to his removal, al-Kabir was criticized by officials from both sides of the North African nation’s political divide over the allocation of Libya’s oil money.