Kuwait Times

Egypt’s cash-strapped rulers woo ex-tycoons

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CAIRO: Almost three years after an uprising fuelled by the old regime’s venality, Egypt’s cash-strapped Islamist government is making amends with businessme­n who offer to pay their way back into the fold. The presidency, strapped to a free falling economy, has said it encourages reconcilia­tion with the businessme­n. The presidency has sent “a positive message to businessme­n to encourage them to settle their situation legally, and the state strongly welcomes them to participat­e,” said presidenti­al spokesman Ihab Fahmy.

Fahmy’s statement came after the country’s tax authority reconciled with the multi-billionair­e Sawiris family, accused of tax evasion through a company in their Orascom conglomera­te. The dispute was settled with an agreement to pay a little over $1 billion dollars over a five year period, with an immediate payment of $357 million.

Authoritie­s are now negotiatin­g with Hussein Salem, on trial in absentia along with the toppled president Hosni Mubarak on corruption charges. Salem, once a close associate of Mubarak, fled to Spain after the early 2011 uprising that overthrew Mubarak. He has already been sentenced to 15 years in prison in another corruption trial. The prosecutio­n announced that Salem has offered to forego 75 percent of his family’s wealth in Egypt, and more than half of its properties and fortune abroad.

The prosecutio­n said it was still in talks with Salem’s lawyer. It demands Salem’s former business partners abroad to drop their claims against Egypt after the cancellati­on of contracts with Salem’s former company, East Mediterran­ean Gas. Salem’s lawyer, Tareq Abdel Aziz, has been quoted in Egyptian press estimating his client’s worth at $1.6 billion.

The reconcilia­tion deals are rooted in a decision by the former military rulers, who took charge of the country after Mubarak’s overthrow and before President Mohamed Morsi’s election last June. The military’s decree allows for reconcilia­tion as long as court sentences against the businessme­n convicted of corruption under Mubarak can be appealed.

Economic analysts say the overtures to the businessme­n aim at scraping in funds to cushion the economy, which has sharply declined since the 18-day uprising that ousted Mubarak. The uprising ushered almost two years of political instabilit­y, punctuated with often deadly protests and a deadlock between the Islamist Morsi and his secular leaning opposition.

“The deal the government made with the Sawiris family which brings in 2.5 billion pounds (357 million dollars) almost covers an important part of the budget, social security payments,” said Ahmed Al-Sayyed Al-Naggar. Naggar, an analyst with the Al-Ahram Centre for Political and Strategic

Studies, a government-funded think tank, believes there could also be a political aspect to the reconcilia­tion deals. Morsi’s movement, the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, “believes that Mubarak’s businessme­n are capable of funding election campaigns against them,” he said.

Egypt is expected to hold a parliament­ary election later this year to replace the Islamist-dominated house annulled by a court before Morsi’s election. Abdul Hafiz Al-Sawi, who sits on the economic committee of the Brotherhoo­d’s Freedom and Justice Party, defends the controvers­ial deals as long as “the state’s funds are not lost and they are done legally.”

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