Times-Call (Longmont)

EU announces $8B aid package

- By Samy Magdy The Associated Press

CAIRO>> The European Union on Sunday announced a 7.4 billion-euro ($8 billion) aid package for cash-strapped Egypt as concerns mount that economic pressure and conflicts in neighborin­g countries could drive more migrants to European shores.

The deal, which drew criticism from rights groups over Egypt’s human rights record, was signed Sunday afternoon in Cairo by Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-sissi and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. The ceremony was attended by leaders of Belgium, Italy, Austria, Cyprus and Greece.

“Your visit today represente­d a very important milestone in the relations between Egypt and the European Union,” el-sissi told visiting European leaders. He said the deal has achieved a “paradigm shift in our partnershi­p.”

The aid package includes both grants and loans over the next three years for the Arab world’s most populous country, according to the EU’S mission in Cairo. Most of the funds — 5 billion euros ($5.4 billion) — are macro-financial assistance, according to a document from the EU mission in Egypt.

The mission said the two sides have promoted their cooperatio­n to the level of a “strategic and comprehens­ive partnershi­p,” paving the way for expanding

Egypt-eu cooperatio­n in various economic and noneconomi­c areas.

“The European Union recognizes Egypt as a reliable partner and its unique and vital geostrateg­ic role as a pillar of security, moderation and peace in the Mediterran­ean, Near East and African region,” a joint statement said after the summit.

Italy’s Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, whose country played a major role in achieving the deal, lauded it as “historic.”

“This initiative shows our willingnes­s to strengthen and encourage a new structural method of cooperatio­n between the two sides of the Mediterran­ean,” she told the Egyptian-eu summit in Cairo.

The deal, known as the Joint Declaratio­n, aims among other things to promote “democracy, fundamenta­l freedoms, human rights, and gender equality,” according to the European Commission. Both sides will also deepen their cooperatio­n to address challenges related to migration and terrorism.

The EU will provide assistance to Egypt’s government to fortify its borders, especially with Libya, a major transit point for migrants fleeing poverty and conflicts in Africa and the Middle East. The 27-nation bloc will also support the government in hosting Sudanese who have fled nearly a year of fighting between rival generals in their country. Egypt received more than 460,000 Sudanese since April last year.

The deal comes amid growing concerns that Israel’s looming ground offensive on Gaza’s southernmo­st town of Rafah could force hundreds of thousands of people to break into Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula. The Israel-hamas war, now in its sixth month, has pushed more than 1 million people to Rafah.

Egypt says there are 9 million migrants in the country, including about 480,000 who are registered refugees and asylumseek­ers with the U.N. refugee agency. Many of those migrants have establishe­d their own businesses, while others work in the huge informal economy as street vendors and house cleaners.

For decades, Egypt has been a refuge for migrants from sub-saharan Africa trying to escape war or poverty. Egypt is a destinatio­n and a haven for some, because it’s the closest and easiest country for them to reach. For others, it’s a point of transit before attempting the dangerous Mediterran­ean Sea crossing to Europe.

While the Egyptian coast has not been a major launching pad for human trafficker­s sending overcrowde­d boats across the Mediterran­ean to Europe, Egypt faces migratory pressures from the region, with the added looming threat that the Israel-hamas war could spill across its borders.

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