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Egypt’s ‘smart’ new capital city is a world away from creaking, chaotic Cairo

NEW ADMINISTRA­TIVE CAPITAL IS AL SISSI’S FLAGSHIP PROJECT AND ITS DESIGN IS BEING USED IN 14 UPCOMING CITIES

- CAIRO

In Egypt’s new capital on the outskirts of Cairo, residents will use smart cards and apps to unlock doors and make payments, and surf the web on public WiFi beamed from lampposts.

A network of at least 6,000 cameras will monitor activity on every street, tracking pedestrian­s and vehicles to regulate traffic and report suspicious activity.

Its ‘smart city’ design is a world away from parts of the existing sprawling capital, where creaking infrastruc­ture can mean patchy internet and phone coverage, doormen at densely built apartment blocks form a human network of lookouts, and administra­tive errands can involve hours of queuing.

The city being built from scratch in the desert — so far called the New Administra­tive Capital — is designed to hold 6.5 million residents and is expected to open to its first civil servants later this year.

How much Egypt’s centre of gravity shifts from Cairo to the new capital, 45km from the Nile, is unclear. For many ordinary Egyptians, for whom the bustling city has been home for generation­s, the move and cost would be unthinkabl­e.

But for those who do make the switch, they are promised a single app for paying utility bills, accessing local services, and reporting complaints and problems. Officials say advanced technology systems will help reduce waste by detecting leaks or faults, and by allowing residents to keep an eye on consumptio­n.

“Through their mobile app a citizen will be able to manage all their life affairs from their mobile phone,” said Mohammad Khalil, head of technology for the Administra­tive Capital for Urban Developmen­t (ACUD), the military and government-owned company building the city.

Technology contracts

Authoritie­s plan to repeat and synchronis­e the technology through other developmen­ts championed under President Abdul Fattah Al Sissi, for whom the new city is a flagship project. “This model is being applied in all the 14 new cities that are being establishe­d ... one of our goals is the integratio­n of cities,” said Khalil.

Some Egyptians see the new capital being for a privileged elite in a country where nearly a third of the population live below the poverty line. Others see the technologi­cal boost as long overdue. “It’s all very useful for the citizen,” said Tark Habib, a 53-year-old trader in central Cairo, where the Mugamma, the monolithic and notoriousl­y chaotic headquarte­rs of Egyptian bureaucrac­y in recent decades, is being emptied.

Technology and communicat­ions contracts for the new capital total $640 million, which could rise to $900 million in later phases, Khalil said. Partners include Huawei, Orange and Mastercard. A surveillan­ce system developed by Honeywell will “monitor crowds and traffic congestion and trigger automated alarms in emergency situations”, the company says.

While enhanced surveillan­ce could make identifica­tion of dissidents easier, “I don’t see what it would really add beyond what they already are doing, which is very extensive,” said Steven Feldstein, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace.

 ?? Reuters ?? A general view of smart lampposts and under constructi­on buildings in the New Administra­tive Capital east of Cairo. The city is designed to hold 6.5 million residents who will use smart cards to open doors and surf the web on WiFi beamed from lampposts.
Reuters A general view of smart lampposts and under constructi­on buildings in the New Administra­tive Capital east of Cairo. The city is designed to hold 6.5 million residents who will use smart cards to open doors and surf the web on WiFi beamed from lampposts.
 ?? Reuters ?? Under-constructi­on buildings in the new city where advanced technology systems will help reduce waste by detecting faults, and by allowing residents to keep an eye on consumptio­n.
Reuters Under-constructi­on buildings in the new city where advanced technology systems will help reduce waste by detecting faults, and by allowing residents to keep an eye on consumptio­n.

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