
Cairo Intensifying Efforts to Restore Normal Traffic in Suez Canal
Egypt is intensifying its efforts to return traffic in its Suez Canal back to normal in wake of the hit revenues have taken because of the attacks by the Iran-backed Houthi militias in Yemen on international shipping in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden.
Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty discussed Suez Canal traffic in a telephone call with his Dutch counterpart Caspar Veldkamp.
Veldkamp hoped the recent ceasefire agreement between Yemen and the US would positively impact navigation in the Red Sea and Suez Canal.
Abdelatty said Veldkamp stressed the Netherlands' readiness to encourage Dutch companies to resume navigation in the Red Sea and the Suez Canal, helping restore normal traffic levels.
Revenue from the Suez Canal, a key source of foreign currency for Egypt, plummeted to $880.9 million in the fourth quarter from $2.40 billion a year earlier, the victim of Houthi attacks, central bank figures showed in May.
Egypt's Suez Canal Authority chief, Osama Rabie, said in May the authority is considering offering discounts ranging from 12% to 15% on transit fees to help restore traffic in the strategic waterway.
Rabie met with representatives from shipping agencies who called for temporary incentives that would help offset increased insurance costs for vessels operating in the Red Sea, which they deemed a high-risk zone.
The meeting followed an Oman-mediated ceasefire between the US and the Houthis, under which the US agreed to stop bombing the Houthis in Yemen in return for the group agreeing to stop attacking US ships. The accord does not include Israel.
Abdelatty and Veldkamp also exchanged views on the latest developments in the Middle East region, particularly the catastrophic situation in Gaza.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Arab News
18 hours ago
- Arab News
Pakistani ambassador meets Egypt's grand mufti to discuss interfaith harmony, religious education
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan's Ambassador to Egypt Aamer Shouket recently met the country's Grand Mufti Dr. Nazir Mohammed Ayyad to discuss the need for interfaith harmony, the threat posed by hate speech and religious education cooperation between the two countries, the Pakistani embassy in Cairo said. Pakistan has made a conscious effort to promote religious pluralism and faith-based tourism in recent years, welcoming Buddhist monks as well as Hindu and Sikh devotees from India and other countries. However, the country continues to grapple with significant challenges, as religious minorities often complain of discrimination and marginalization in Pakistan. Shouket met Dr. Ayyad in Cairo at Egypt's Dar Al-Ifta, the country's pioneer foundation that issues religious verdicts on various issues, the Pakistani embassy said on Sunday. 'The meeting discussed matters related to issues and challenges facing the Muslim world,' the statement said. 'Hate speech was identified as a threat to peace and interfaith harmony.' Ambassador Aamir Shouket @aamirshouket called on the #Grand #Mufti of #Egypt Dr. Nazir Mohammed Ayyad @DarAlIftaEng #Cairo today.@ForeignOfficePk @MORAisbOfficial @MoIB_Official@GovtofPakistan @PkPublicDiplo @epwing_official @appcsocialmedia — Pakistan Embassy Egypt (@PakinEgypt) June 1, 2025 The Pakistani ambassador also expressed satisfaction over the existing cooperation between Islamabad and Cairo in religious education, the embassy said. 'The Ambassador admired the role of Al-Azhar scholars toward spreading the true spirit of Islam across the world,' it added. Dr. Ayyad stated that Pakistan was 'very well respected' in Egyptian society as a prominent Muslim country, the embassy said. The Egyptian grand mufti recalled his recent visit to Pakistan where he met Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and expressed his best wishes and prayers for the people of Pakistan. Pakistan and Egypt enjoy cordial ties that date back several decades. Egypt plans to establish a campus of its Al-Azhar University, one of the world's oldest centers of Islamic education, in Pakistan.


Arab News
a day ago
- Arab News
Egypt's foreign minister urges end to Israeli war in Gaza during call with Witkoff
LONDON: Egypt's Foreign Minister, Badr Abdelatty, stressed the urgent need for an immediate cessation of Israeli aggression against the Gaza Strip during a phone call with Steve Witkoff, the US President's Special Envoy to the Middle East. Abdelatty emphasized that alleviating the humanitarian suffering in the Palestinian coastal enclave must be a priority for the international community and called for unconditional access to humanitarian aid. He emphasized that a just and lasting solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict requires a comprehensive political settlement that aligns with President Trump's vision for sustainable peace in the Middle East, the Emirates News Agency reported. Abdelatty was a member of the Ministerial Committee designated by the Joint Extraordinary Arab-Islamic Summit on Gaza, which Israel prevented from visiting the occupied West Bank on Sunday to meet with Palestinian officials in Ramallah. Arab ministers from Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Jordan, and Egypt, along with the Secretary-General of the Arab League, condemned what they described as the "arrogant" decision by Israel to block their visit and its rejection of any peace efforts.


Arab News
a day ago
- Arab News
Egypt unveils plan for new desert city in latest megaproject
CAIRO: Egypt has unveiled plans for a vast new urban development west of Cairo where a man-made channel of the River Nile will eventually wind through what was once arid desert. The new city, named Jirian, meaning 'Flow' in Arabic, is part of Egypt's Nile Delta scheme, a massive agricultural initiative to reclaim about 2.5 million acres west of the original Nile Delta. The ambitious agricultural project, which started in 2021, seeks to boost production of strategic crops such as wheat and corn while reducing the North African country's food import bill. The project is the latest in a string of megaprojects launched by President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi in recent years, including a new administrative capital east of Cairo. While officials say these projects are key to Egypt's long-term growth, they have also contributed to the country's soaring foreign debt, which quadrupled since 2015 to reach $155.2 billion by late 2024. The country has also received billions of dollars from the International Monetary Fund and the EU to ensure its financial stability, with the EU pledging billions more last month. At a launch event on Sunday, Egyptian Prime Minister Moustafa Madbouli called the Jirian project 'an urban and development revolution.' He added that it would create 250,000 jobs and serve as the cornerstone of a wider development zone equivalent in size to four to five governorates. 'We are talking about full-spectrum development,' he told reporters, describing a sprawling urban zone that will include industry, logistics hubs, and homes for 'between 2.5 and 3 million families.' The government did not disclose the project's total cost, which is being developed in partnership with three major Egyptian real estate firms. The new Nile Delta project comes at a time when Egypt is already under pressure to secure its water future. With 97 percent of its fresh water sourced from the Nile, the country has been locked in a years-long dispute with Addis Ababa over the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, which Cairo fears could reduce downstream water flows.