Egypt: Official Calls to Rationalize Spending amid Rising Prices

Egyptian factory workers decorate candy dolls in preparation of the Mawlid celebrations, marking the birthday of the Prophet Mohammed, at a traditional factory in the Bab al-Bahr district in Cairo, Egypt, 26 September 2022. (EPA)
Egyptian factory workers decorate candy dolls in preparation of the Mawlid celebrations, marking the birthday of the Prophet Mohammed, at a traditional factory in the Bab al-Bahr district in Cairo, Egypt, 26 September 2022. (EPA)
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Egypt: Official Calls to Rationalize Spending amid Rising Prices

Egyptian factory workers decorate candy dolls in preparation of the Mawlid celebrations, marking the birthday of the Prophet Mohammed, at a traditional factory in the Bab al-Bahr district in Cairo, Egypt, 26 September 2022. (EPA)
Egyptian factory workers decorate candy dolls in preparation of the Mawlid celebrations, marking the birthday of the Prophet Mohammed, at a traditional factory in the Bab al-Bahr district in Cairo, Egypt, 26 September 2022. (EPA)

The Egyptian government stressed that it would continue to subsidize bread and provide a safe reserve of goods, meat and poultry, amid official and media calls to “rationalize spending due to high prices.”

Minister of Supply and Internal Trade Dr. Ali Al-Moselhi said President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi’s directives to raise the reserve of strategic commodities, especially wheat, and to provide the necessary financial funds for this purpose, helped confront the challenges posed by the COVID-19 pandemic and the Russian-Ukrainian crisis.

The minister noted that his country “has a reserve of wheat for a period that can last 6.6 months, a reserve of seven months of frozen poultry, and self-sufficiency of live poultry.”

He added that the annual bread subsidy budget amounted to 51 billion Egyptian pounds, adding that bread subsidies “may reach 73 billion pounds during this year.”

The Dandara Economic Forum, which concluded on Friday, called for the need to “rationalize consumption according to the actual needs in order to confront the economic crisis.”

Last month, Egyptian and media officials conveyed assurances about the country’s “safe economic position” that coincided with the announcement of official measures to “maximize agricultural production” and support “food security.”

Meanwhile, Minister of Local Development Major General Hisham Amna called on the supervisors of Sanad Al-Khair initiative, which was launched by the ministry to provide basic food commodities to citizens, to intensify their presence in popular neighborhoods and most needy areas.

In a statement on Saturday, the minister said that the initiative launched in March came in implementation of Sisi’s directives, with the aim to unite all the state’s efforts to support citizens in the most needy and popular areas, and to provide their food needs at low prices and high quality.



Stormy Weather Sweeps Away Tents Belonging to Displaced People in Gaza

Displaced Palestinians stand in front of tents along an inundated passage, following heavy rainfall north of Deir al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip on November 24, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas. (AFP)
Displaced Palestinians stand in front of tents along an inundated passage, following heavy rainfall north of Deir al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip on November 24, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas. (AFP)
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Stormy Weather Sweeps Away Tents Belonging to Displaced People in Gaza

Displaced Palestinians stand in front of tents along an inundated passage, following heavy rainfall north of Deir al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip on November 24, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas. (AFP)
Displaced Palestinians stand in front of tents along an inundated passage, following heavy rainfall north of Deir al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip on November 24, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas. (AFP)

Weather is compounding the challenges facing displaced people in Gaza, where heavy rains and dropping temperatures are making tents and other temporary shelters uninhabitable.

Government officials in the Hamas-controlled coastal enclave said on Monday that nearly 10,000 tents had been swept away by flooding over the past two days, adding to their earlier warnings about the risks facing those sheltering in low-lying floodplains, including areas designated as humanitarian zones.

Um Mohammad Marouf, a mother who fled bombardments in northern Gaza and now is sheltering with her family in a Gaza City tent said the downpour had covered her children and left everyone wet and vulnerable.

“We have nothing to protect ourselves,” she said outside the United Nations-provided tent where she lives with 10 family members.

Marouf and others living in rows of cloth and nylon tents hung their drenched clothing on drying lines and re-erected their tarpaulin walls on Monday.

Officials from the Hamas-run government said that 81% of the 135,000 tents appeared unfit for shelter, based on recent assessments, and blamed Israel for preventing the entry of additional needed tents. They said many had been swept away by seawater or were inadequate to house displaced people as winter sets in.

The UNestimates that around 90% of Gaza's population of 2.3 million people have been displaced, often multiple times, and hundreds of thousands are living in squalid tent camps with little food, water or basic services. Israeli evacuation warnings now cover around 90% of the territory.

“The first rains of the winter season mean even more suffering. Around half a million people are at risk in areas of flooding. The situation will only get worse with every drop of rain, every bomb, every strike,” UNRWA, the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, wrote in a statement on X on Monday.