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In Egypt, prospect of Trump win raises fears over school funding

In Egypt, prospect of Trump win raises fears over school funding
A picture taken on June 28, 2024 in the Mediterranean city of Alexandria, shows Egyptian high school students studying in the Alexandria Library (AFP)
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Updated 31 October 2024

In Egypt, prospect of Trump win raises fears over school funding

In Egypt, prospect of Trump win raises fears over school funding
  • USAID in Egypt allocated approximately $200 million in grants to various sectors, including agriculture, coastal communities, renewable energy, and education

CAIRO: In Egypt, education officials are watching the US election with concern, worried that if Republican Donald Trump wins he could reduce US financial support for schools catering to students who hope to help lead the energy transition.
The former president has pledged to roll back key climate policies implemented by his predecessor, Joe Biden, and 10 international applied technology schools in Egypt could be affected if funds are cut, some experts say.
The 10 secondary schools were created through a partnership between the US Agency for International Development, the Egyptian government and the private sector. Around 20,000 students apply annually for 8,000 places.
“The funding of these schools is likely to be affected (if Trump wins the election) due to his position on environmental policies, which are in contrast with those of the current administration,” Karim Ebeid, president of Al Adl Center for Economic and Strategic Studies, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
“This may affect the non-renewal or expansion of such schools, which affects Egypt’s development plans,” he said, adding that if US funding dried up, Egypt could turn to other international partners, such as China, Russia or Japan.
“China, especially, for the past two decades, has been working to strengthen its investments in African countries through the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation,” he said.
The schools offer free tuition to all students but require certain conditions for enrollment, such as achieving high grades in English, science, and maths. Applicants are also interviewed.
An Egyptian government official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said if US funding for the schools were to stop under a second Trump administration, Egypt would have to develop alternative plans for financing, management, and partnerships.
The schools provide critical skills to thousands of young Egyptians like Zeyad Maged, a third-year student at Elsewedy International School for Applied Technology and Software in New October City in the Giza Governorate.
“Last year, I led a capstone (final year) project with my team focused on environmental sustainability, developing a website to promote recycling and foster a healthier community,” said the 17-year-old, who specializes in software development.
“The school provides full scholarships, covering the costs of laptops, uniforms, and books, he added.
“All of this comes at a very high quality.”
Teaching ‘critical topics’
Trump, who is running against Vice President Kamala Harris, has put Biden’s climate and energy agenda in the crosshairs on the campaign trail, meaning that billions in clean energy funding could hinge on who wins the Nov. 5 election.
Biden’s policies include tax breaks and incentives for electric vehicles and stricter environmental regulations for power plants and automobiles. Trump has also threatened to once again pull the United States out of the 2015 Paris climate agreement.
Mohamed Azzazy, head of surveys at the Natural Resources Department at the University of Sadat City, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation that the curricula in the 10 applied technology schools prepare young people for environmental sustainability challenges.
“Students today must engage with critical topics like global warming, renewable energy, carbon footprints, and biodiversity to ensure a sustainable future,” Azzazy said.
“These subjects are often missing from conventional Egyptian education, particularly in practical application, but the schools are bridging that gap,” he said, adding that the schools offered hands-on activities like clean-up operations and recycling workshops.
Egypt wants to accelerate the provision of renewable energy that could ease electricity shortages and supply green power to Europe, but faces challenges in funding updates to its grid and unlocking investments for new wind and solar plants.
Between 2021 and 2022, USAID in Egypt allocated approximately $200 million in grants to various sectors, including agriculture, coastal communities, renewable energy, and education.
According to the USAID website, the schools and other education initiatives account for $70 million of funding from 2021 to 2026, with plans to expand the number of schools to cover 15 governorates, up from the current eight.
USAID did not respond to a request for comment for this article.
Amr Basila, the director of the operation and management unit for the International Applied Technology Schools, said the institutions provided internationally certified credentials, hands-on experience, and access to job markets in competitive fields including artificial intelligence, digital arts, software engineering and logistics.
“Though still emerging in Egypt, these sectors offer significant opportunities for workforce development and economic growth,” he said.
Some Egyptian observers fear that if Trump wins again, funding for such projects could be cut.
Mohamed Rabie El-Dehy, deputy head of the independent Dialogue Center for Political and Media Studies in Cairo, noted that in 2017, then-president Trump said he intended to reduce US aid to the Middle East, particularly for climate change and renewable energy programs, by around 30 percent.
“Environmental schools of this kind were not established until the Biden administration. Under Trump, no environmental schools were built; the focus was limited to teacher training programs in other schools,” El-Dehy said.
“Similarly, should Trump return to office, we are unlikely to see an expansion in the number of international applied technology schools,” El-Dehy said.
This article is published in collaboration with Egab.


Jordanian business chief hails EU as key partner in supporting Jordan’s economy

Jordanian business chief hails EU as key partner in supporting Jordan’s economy
Updated 4 sec ago

Jordanian business chief hails EU as key partner in supporting Jordan’s economy

Jordanian business chief hails EU as key partner in supporting Jordan’s economy
  • Partnership a ‘living model of constructive cooperation,’ says Ali Murad
  • Financial aid, investments highlight Brussels’ support for Jordan’s economic goals

AMMAN: The EU remains one of Jordan’s most important economic partners, playing a vital role in supporting the country’s economy through financial assistance, grants, and investments, Jordanian European Business Association President Ali Murad said on Saturday.

Murad described the Jordan-EU partnership as a “living model of constructive cooperation” that has helped Jordan confront economic crises amid regional and international challenges, the Jordan News Agency reported.

He also praised King Abdullah II’s “great efforts” to strengthen cooperation, particularly in the economic sector.

The JEBA president said that the partnership has witnessed “remarkable development” since the signing of a strategic agreement earlier this year, reflecting the EU’s commitment to supporting Jordan’s economic goals.

On Wednesday, the Cabinet approved a financing agreement and memorandum of understanding covering €500 million ($585 million) in EU financial assistance, part of a €3 billion package agreed for 2025–2027.

The package, signed in the presence of King Abdullah in January, includes €640 million in grants, €1.4 billion in investments, and around €1 billion in macroeconomic support.

“Through this financial package, the EU demonstrates its commitment to strengthening the strategic partnership with Jordan and its appreciation for the Kingdom’s pivotal role in the region,” Murad said.

He added that the agreement was a “significant step” in advancing Jordan-EU ties, with positive impacts expected on the national economy and treasury as implementation begins.

According to official data, trade between Jordan and the EU reached JD1.129 billion ($1.6 billion) in the first four months of 2025, up from JD1.025 billion during the same period last year.

National exports to EU markets rose 14.4 percent to JD143 million, compared with JD125 million a year earlier.


Young Gaza woman flown to Italy for treatment, dies

Young Gaza woman flown to Italy for treatment, dies
Updated 13 min 27 sec ago

Young Gaza woman flown to Italy for treatment, dies

Young Gaza woman flown to Italy for treatment, dies
ROME: A young Palestinian woman with severe wasting who was flown from Gaza to Italy this week for treatment has died, the hospital said on Saturday.

The 20-year-old, named by Italian media as Marah Abu Zuhri, arrived in Pisa on an Italian government humanitarian flight overnight Wednesday-Thursday.

She had a “very complex clinical picture” and was “in a profound state of organic wasting,” the University Hospital of Pisa said in a statement.

On Friday, after undergoing tests and starting treatment, she had a sudden respiratory crisis and cardiac arrest, and died.

The hospital did not elaborate on her condition, but Italian news agencies reported that she was suffering from severe malnutrition.

Humanitarian groups, UN agencies and Palestinian militant group Hamas have warned of the risk of widespread famine in war-battered Gaza.

The young woman had come to Italy with her mother on one of three Italian air force flights that arrived this week with a total of 31 patients and their companions.

They all suffered from serious congenital diseases, wounds or amputations, the Italian foreign ministry said at the time.

So far more than 180 children and young people from Gaza have been brought to Italy since the war began between Israel and Hamas.

The head of the Tuscany region, Eugenio Giani, offered his condolences to the young woman’s family.

Bus plunges into river in Algeria capital, killing 18

Bus plunges into river in Algeria capital, killing 18
Updated 16 August 2025

Bus plunges into river in Algeria capital, killing 18

Bus plunges into river in Algeria capital, killing 18
  • The accident happened in late afternoon in the Mohammadia district of east Algiers

ALGIERS: Eighteen people were killed and nine injured in the Algerian capital on Friday when a bus plunged from a bridge into a river, the emergency services said.
The accident happened in late afternoon in the Mohammadia district of east Algiers and two of the injured were in critical condition, they added.
There was no immediate word on the cause of the accident.


Iran policeman killed in clash in restive province bordering Pakistan

Iran policeman killed in clash in restive province bordering Pakistan
Updated 16 August 2025

Iran policeman killed in clash in restive province bordering Pakistan

Iran policeman killed in clash in restive province bordering Pakistan
  • The clash occurred in Sistan-Baluchistan province, the scene of frequent violence between security forces and rebel, extremist groups
  • The southeastern province is home to a large ethnic Baloch population, most of whom are Sunni Muslims, in contrast to Iran’s Shiite majority

TEHRAN: Gunmen in Iran’s volatile southeast killed a police officer and wounded another in a shootout with security forces, news agencies reported Saturday.

The clash occurred in Sistan-Baluchistan province, one of the country’s poorest regions and the scene of frequent violence between the security forces and Baloch minority rebels, extremist groups and drug traffickers.

“In an exchange of fire... between Iranshahr police and armed men, one officer was wounded and another killed,” the Fars news agency said, citing the police.

The ISNA news agency also reported the deadly gunbattle.

Sistan-Baluchistan is home to a large ethnic Baloch population, most of whom are Sunni Muslims, in contrast to Iran’s Shiite majority.

Fars said the assailants were wounded in the firefight, fled the scene and were being pursued by police.

In recent years, the Jaish Al-Adl (Arabic for ‘Army of Justice’) group has claimed multiple attacks in the area. The group operates from the borderlands between Iran, Pakistan and Afghanistan, mainly the Sistan-Baluchestan triangle, but has been active inside Iran.

On Sunday, the group carried out an attack in Sistan-Baluchistan that killed a police officer, according to local media.

On July 26, at least six people were killed in an attack claimed by Jaish Al-Adl on a courthouse in the same province.


Arab, Islamic foreign ministers condemn Netanyahu’s ‘Greater Israel’ remark

Arab, Islamic foreign ministers condemn Netanyahu’s ‘Greater Israel’ remark
Updated 16 August 2025

Arab, Islamic foreign ministers condemn Netanyahu’s ‘Greater Israel’ remark

Arab, Islamic foreign ministers condemn Netanyahu’s ‘Greater Israel’ remark
  • In a joint statement, the ministers said the pronouncements by Netanyahu and his ministers were “a blatant and dangerous violation” of international law
  • The statement was signed by foreign ministers of 31 nations and the heads of the Arab League, OIC and GCC

RIYADH: The foreign ministers of Arab and Muslim nations on Saturday denounced statements about a “Greater Israel” that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was reported to have made in the wake of pronouncements by his far-right allies to annex Palestinian territories.

In a joint statement the ministers said the pronouncements by Netanyahu and his ministers were “a blatant and dangerous violation” of international law.

“They also constitute a direct threat to Arab national security, to the sovereignty of states, and to regional and international peace and security,” said the statement carried by the Saudi Press Agency.

Signatories of the document included the foreign ministers of ÂÜÀòÊÓÆ”, Algeria, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Chad, Comoros, Djibouti, Egypt, Gambia, Indonesia, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Maldives, Mauritania, Morocco, Nigeria, Oman, Pakistan, Palestine, Qatar, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, Turkiye, the UAE, and Yemen. Also included were the secretaries-general of the League of Arab States, the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, and the Gulf Cooperation Council.

The ministers stressed that “while their states reaffirm their respect for international legitimacy and the Charter of the UN, particularly article 2, paragraph 4 which prohibits the use of force or the threat thereof, they will adopt all policies and measures that preserve peace, in a manner that serves the interests of all states and peoples in achieving security, stability, and development, away from illusions of domination and the imposition of power by force.”

The ministers pushed back against Israeli minister Bezalel Smotrich’s approval of the settlement plan in the E1 area of the West Bank, along with his statements rejecting the establishment of a Palestinian state.

European nations are also alarmed at the move and have called on the Israeli government to halt its plans, with Germany warning that the E1 settlement plan and the expansion of Maale Adumim would further restrict the mobility of the Palestinian population in the West Bank by splitting it in half and cutting the area off from East Jerusalem.

The statement said Israel’s plan would constitute a “blatant violation of international law and a flagrant assault on the inalienable right of the Palestinian people to realize their independent, sovereign state on the lines of June 4, 1967, with occupied Jerusalem as its capital.”

It warned of Israel’s blatant disregard for the rights of Palestinians and its neighbors as the international community as a whole “directly fuel cycles of violence and conflict and undermines prospects for achieving just and comprehensive peace in the region.”

Ministers “reiterated their rejection and condemnation of Israel’s crimes of aggression, genocide, and ethnic cleansing” and reaffirmed the need for a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip “ensuring unconditional humanitarian access to end the policy of systematic starvation that Israel is pursuing as a weapon of genocide.”

More than 61,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza since Hamas’ attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. Israel has also continued to block international humanitarian agencies from delivering food to starving people in the enclave.