Egypt court overturns nixing of Saudi island deal
CAIRO (Reuters) – Egypt’s Court of Urgent Matters has ordered the suspension of an earlier court ruling that annulled a deal to hand over two Red Sea islands to Saudi Arabia, judicial sources said on Thursday.
Egypt announced in April a maritime border accord with Saudi Arabia, which could see it lose control of two Red Sea islands. The accord caused a public uproar and rare protests by Egyptians, many of whom said they were taught at school that Tiran and Sanafir were Egyptian.
An administrative court voided the accord in June after a lawsuit was filed against it, saying Egyptian sovereignty over the islands held and could not be given up.
Egyptian authorities lodged a formal appeal with the Higher Administrative Court, part of the Council of State, a high-level judicial body that gives legal advice to the government, drafts laws and oversees legal cases involving public entities. That appeal is still pending. The Court of Urgent Matters ruled on Thursday on a separate appeal filed by Ashraf Farahat, a lawyer. But legal experts dismissed that court’s ruling, saying it was not qualified to pronounce on matters related to public administration.
“This verdict is unconstitutional and void. If the government were to refer the treaty to parliament for ratification based on this verdict then it is announcing to everyone that it does not care about the constitution,” constitutional expert Muhammad Nour Farahat said.
Tiran and Sanafir islands are situated between Saudi Arabia and Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula in the narrow entrance to the Gulf of Aqaba leading to Israel and Jordan.