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● 09.15.11

●● Cablegate: Government Site in Egypt Launched by Bill Gates

Posted in Africa, Bill Gates, Cablegate, Microsoft at 4:58 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Summary: A good demonstration of how Microsoft and Gates manage to manage governments by proxy

According to the following Cablegate cable, the Ministry of Investment (MOI) in Egypt is not quite working on its own. “On behalf of MOI,” says ¶6, “Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates launched a website, www.investment.gov.eg in January 2005, to serve as Egypt’s investment portal.”

Since when does Bill govern Egypt or run its economy? There is a lot of other interesting stuff in the cables below, but it is probably of most interest to Egyptians who wish to understand how Mubarak’s regime has harmed them by giving control to imperialists who export weapons (at taxpayers’ expense).

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 CAIRO 005350

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE

STATE FOR NEA/ELA, NEA/RA, AND EB/IDF

USAID FOR ANE/MEA MCCLOUD

USTR FOR SAUMS

TREASURY FOR MILLS/NUGENT/PETERS

COMMERCE FOR 4520/ITA/ANESA/TALAAT

E.O. 12958: N/A

TAGS: ECON [Economic Conditions], EFIN [Financial and Monetary Affairs],

ETRD [Foreign Trade], EINV [Foreign Investments], EG [Egypt]

SUBJECT: UPDATE ON EGYPT'S PRIVATIZATION PROGRAM

REF: A. CAIRO 4374

  B.  CAIRO 1329 

Sensitive but Unclassified. Please protect accordingly.


Summary


¶1. (SBU) Since taking office in July 2004, Prime Minister

Nazif's administration has reinvigorated the GOE's program

to privatize state-owned industries. Under the leadership

of the new Ministry of Investment, the revitalized program

aims to speed up privatizations by making public enterprises

more efficient - and thus more attractive to potential

investors - while also introducing good corporate governance

principles. The effort has paid off for the GOE, which

completed a total of 19 privatizations from July 2004 to

March 2005, generating LE 2.9 billion ($500 million)

compared with five transactions generating LE 81 million

($14 million) in the period July 2003-March 2004. The GOE

has promised even bolder steps in the near future for

divestiture of formerly "strategic" industries. Labor

issues remain a concern, but the GOE has indicated that it

will deal with workers' concerns on a case-by-case basis as

public companies are privatized. It is doubtful, however,

that the GOE would approve any deals that would result in

massive layoffs, particularly in an election year. End

summary.


Privatization revitalized


¶2. (SBU) The GOE privatization program has undergone a

complete makeover in concept and implementation in the last

year under the Nazif administration's new Ministry of

Investment (MOI). Minister of Investment Mahmoud Mohieldin

has been the driving force behind revitalization of the

program, which he refers to as "asset management."

Mohieldin has used his political weight, as a key member of

the NDP economic policy apparatus, to garner support for

broadening the scope of the program to include all public

enterprises, the more competitive companies as well as those

with large workforces that could be negatively affected by

privatization. He has made privatization a focal point of

the macroeconomic reform effort led by the Minister of

Finance, the Minister of Foreign Trade and Industry and

Nazif himself, all of whom agree on the goals of stimulating

private sector-driven growth and "marketing Egypt" as a

destination for foreign investment.


Pre-Nazif: Privatization in fits and starts


¶3. (U) The GOE has two categories of public enterprises:

wholly state-owned companies regulated by Law 203 of 1991,

and joint venture companies (including banks) with a public-

private ownership mix, regulated by Law 159 of 1981. When

the privatization program began, the 314 wholly state-owned

companies were grouped according to the type of economic

activity they conducted and put under the supervision of

holding companies (HCs). The HCs managed the privatization

of their affiliate companies, eventually dissolving when all

of their affiliates had been privatized. This process

created a conflict of interest, especially for the HC

chairmen. Working efficiently to privatize all of their

affiliates meant that the HC chairmen worked themselves out

of a job. Privatization was therefore a slow, sporadic

process and after more than a decade of fits and starts,

liquidations and restructuring, there were still seven HCs

with 139 affiliate companies.

¶4. (U) In 1999, after a cabinet change, the GOE decided to

include the sale of public shares in joint venture companies

under the rubric of the privatization program. The Ministry

of Economy and Foreign Trade (now the Ministry of Foreign

Trade and Industry) began an inventory of joint ventures and

their shareholder structure. After a lengthy research

process, the number of joint venture companies and banks was

found to exceed 600, all with different percentages of

public ownership. In early 2000, the entire privatization

program, including wholly state owned companies and joint

ventures, was consolidated under the Ministry of Public

Enterprises, where it remain until being subsumed by the new

MOI in the July 2004 cabinet change.


Privatization under Nazif


¶5. (U) Soon after MOI took over managing the privatization

program, a three-pronged effort was undertaken to remake

public enterprises by: 1) restructuring and re-engineering

public companies to make them more efficient, and ultimately

more attractive to potential purchasers; 2) implementing

good corporate governance principles in all public

companies; and 3) aggressively pursuing the advertisement

and sale of public companies. As part of the effort to

introduce corporate governance principles, MOI published an

OECD-based code of conduct for corporate governance and

disclosure in public companies and began publishing the

minutes of companies' general assembly meetings to increase

transparency. MOI also created a ministerial committee to

assist investors in resolving disputes arising from

privatization transactions. The committee has already

reportedly resolved 18 disputes, including several long-

standing disputes from privatizations that occurred in the

pre-Nazif era.

¶6. (U) MOI also began a campaign to advertise the newly

revamped privatization program. The thrust of the ad

campaign was that the GOE was committed to removing

obstacles that had blocked or slowed privatizations in the

past. Labor and debt issues would be dealt with on a case-

by-case basis, foreign private sector interest was

encouraged rather than feared as it had been under previous

administrations, and no sectors were off-limits or

"strategic" as in the past. On behalf of MOI, Microsoft

Chairman Bill Gates launched a website,

www.investment.gov.eg in January 2005, to serve as Egypt's

investment portal. The GOE then took its investment

campaign to the May 2005 World Economic Forum in an effort

to drum up more foreign investment.

¶7. (U) The result of MOI's efforts has been a rekindling of

interest among foreign investors. A list of 41 local and

international financial institutions, including Citibank,

Goldman Sachs and Merrill Lynch, are now working with MOI as

advisors/consultants on privatization. A number of

prominent foreign companies - such as Ciments Francais, La

Farge Titan and Michelin - concluded multi-million dollar

deals to purchase public companies such as Suez Cement (ref

B). From July 2004 to March 2005, the GOE completed 19

privatizations, generating LE 2.9 billion in revenue,

compared with only five transactions that generated LE 81

million in the period July 2003-March 2004. MOI expects the

total value of privatizations in fiscal year 2004/2005 to

exceed LE 3 billion, almost double the aggregate value of

sales for the period 2001 through June 2004. The budget for

fiscal year 2005/2006 (July 2005-June 2006) projects

revenues from privatization will reach LE 5 billion (ref A).


Privatization expanded


¶8. (U) As noted above, MOI has included in the

privatization program companies that were not previously

slated for sale. Prior administrations considered certain

companies "cash cows" that were too valuable for the GOE to

sell. Likewise, certain sectors, such as petrochemicals and

telecoms, were considered "strategic" and therefore off

limits to private ownership, especially foreign private

ownership. In June MOI sold 20% of the GOE's stake in Sidi

Krir petrochemical company on the Cairo and Alexandria Stock

Exchange (CASE) for LE 70/share. The company's shares have

dominated trading by volume and value on the CASE in the

last several weeks and recently closed at LE 105/share. A

number of other high profile companies are also in the

pipeline, including petroleum company AMOC and Eastern

Tobacco Company (one of the GOE's "cash cows"). MOI has

also indicated it will offer a significant stake in Telecom

Egypt by the end of 2005. Shares of several public

companies, possibly including Telecom Egypt, will also soon

be registered on the New York Stock Exchange to further open

channels for foreign investment. (Note: An update on

privatization in the banking sector will be sent septel.

End note).


Labor issues


¶10. (SBU) One of the difficult issues for the GOE as it

divests its public assets is the reaction of labor. The GOE

deals with excess labor in companies to be privatized by

offering early retirement packages, which are largely funded

by proceeds from privatization. Senior GOE officials

continue to provide public reassurances that labor issues

will be resolved amicably and a safety net will be provided

for workers affected by privatization, in keeping with the

GOE's general policy of protection of low-income earners.

The MOI is working on a new early retirement system designed

to more closely address workers' concerns and improve the

financial management of privatization proceeds that will be

used to fund the early retirements.

¶11. (SBU) Nevertheless, in state-owned enterprises,

particularly those burdened with surplus manpower like

textiles, iron, and steel, concerned workers have expressed

opposition to privatization through their representatives in

parliament, through strikes and in the opposition press.

The proposed sale of shares in Suez and Torah Cement

Companies late last year triggered strikes that were

resolved only after MOI obtained the purchaser's commitment

not to lay off workers for three years (ref B). Mohamed

Hassouna, Advisor to the Minister on Privatization Affairs,

told Econoff that MOI is "keeping channels open to workers,"

and cooperating with the Egyptian Trade Union Federation

(ETUF) on a case-by-case basis to resolve potential problems

with privatization deals. It would be surprising, however,

for the GOE to conclude any deals that risk large-scale

layoffs from labor-intensive industries prior to Egypt's

October elections.

CORBIN

Also see the following Cablegate cable in which ¶9 speaks of Kamel holding a “meeting with USG [US Government] officials and on the Hill, and [how he] also met with Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates and executives from Intel, Cisco, and Oracle.”

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 04 CAIRO 005344

SIPDIS

STATE FOR NEA/ELA, NEA/RA, AND EB/IDF

USAID FOR ANE/MEA MCCLOUD

USTR FOR SAUMS

TREASURY FOR MILLS/NUGENT/PETERS

COMMERCE FOR 4520/ITA/ANESA/TALAAT

E.O. 12958: N/A

TAGS: ECON [Economic Conditions], EFIN [Financial and Monetary Affairs],

ETRD [Foreign Trade], EINV [Foreign Investments], ENRG [Energy and Power],

EWWT [Waterborne Transportation], EG [Egypt]

SUBJECT: EGYPT MONTHLY ECONOMIC REPORT: MAY-JUNE 2005


Summary


¶1. In this edition: More Egyptian companies make it into

international emerging market stock indices and the GOE

signs an S&T agreement with the EU. The Ministry of

Communication and Information Technology announces a third

mobile phone license will be issued and minister Tarek Kamel

visits the U.S. Orascom Telecom purchases an Italian

telecom. President Mubarak inaugurates a new liquid natural

gas facility, the Ministry of Petroleum announces new oil

and gas deals as well as new oil discoveries, and Egypt and

Israel sign an MOU on gas exports. Air traffic controls go

on a "go-slow" strike and Suez Canal revenues increase 18%

over last fiscal year. End summary.


Macroeconomic Developments


¶2. In mid-May Morgan Stanley International (MSI) announced

the addition of seven Egyptian companies to its emerging

markets indices, bring the total number of Egyptian

companies on MSI indices to seventeen. MSI increased

Egypt's weight in its indices, which cover all emerging

markets, from 0.77% to 0.78%. The change raises Egypt's

market capitalization in the MSI indices to $1.22 billion.

The seven new companies included are EFG-Hermes Holding,

Egyptian American Bank, Egyptian Financial and Industrial

Co., Ezz Rebars, Egypt Beni Souef Cement, Olympic Group and

Sinai Cement. The companies were chosen based on largest

private sector ownership, market capitalization and trading

activity in the Egyptian market. Other Egyptian companies

included in the MSI indices include domestic blue chips like

Commercial International Bank, AlWatany Egyptian Bank,

Eastern Tobacco, Media Production, EIPICO, Mobinil, Nasr

City Construction, Misr International Bank, Orascom

Construction and Orascom Telecom Holding.


Science and Technology


¶3. S&T Conference: On May 28, PM Nazif opened the First

National Conference for Scientific Research in Egypt. About

4,000 Egyptian scientists and researchers, including

Egyptian expatriate scientists, and various Cabinet

ministers attended the two-day event. The conference

focused on soliciting feedback from the S&T community on

development of a new strategy for promoting scientific

research, services and technology in Egypt. For the first

time in recent memory, ministers fielded direct questions

from working-level Egyptian scientists and listened to their

opinions on S&T issues. Minister of Foreign Trade and

Industry Rashid discussed plans to increase private sector

funding of R&D projects and Minister of Higher Education and

Scientific Research Salama noted that his ministry would

establish a fund to support R&D.

¶4. The conference produced a series of recommendations to

shape a new national S&T strategy for Egypt. The most

significant decision was to increase the GOE budget

allocation for scientific research by 10-50%. The increase

would include salaries and administrative costs for

scientific institutions. The conference action plan will be

published at the end of July. (Comment: PM Nazif's

commitment to increasing the S&T budget and the presence at

the conference of reform-minded ministers such as Rashid

indicates that the GOE is serious about reform in the field

of scientific research. Private sector involvement will be

key, however, and the GOE's ability to attract foreign

investment in S&T will depend on continued commitment to

macroeconomic reform. End comment).

¶5. EU-Egypt S&T Agreement: On June 21, PM Nazif attended

the signing of a new S&T agreement between Egypt and the EU.

According to Fawzi El Refaei, President of the Egyptian

Academy of Scientific Research and Technology, the agreement

aims to expand S&T cooperation and provides for Euro 11

million in funding for S&T projects. The agreement allows

Egyptian scientists and research institutions to apply for

funding of specific R&R projects from EU sources. El Refaei

indicated that funding from this agreement would be

channelled into areas of development identified in Egypt's

new S&T strategy.


Telecommunications and Info Tech


¶6. In mid-May, Minister of Communication and Information

Technology (MCIT) Tarek Kamel announced that the GOE would

soon issue a license for a third mobile phone operator. The

RFP would be issued in 3-4 months and proposals would be

reviewed by early 2006, with the goal of getting the third

operator in place by mid-2007. Kamel indicated that MCIT

anticipated LE 2.5 billion in licensing fees from the new

operator. The coming RFP would be "technology neutral,"

i.e., either GSM or CDMA. According to a study by the

National Telecommunications Regulatory Authority (NTRA),

Egypt's mobile market growth rate is currently 12%, but is

expected to reach 25% within five years.

¶7. In late May, the Information Technology Industry

Development Authority (ITIDA) invited Egyptian and

international firms to apply for e-signature licenses under

Law 15 of 2004, which regulates e-signatures. According to

ITIDA, use of e-signature technology will encourage new

investment in e-commerce and e-business projects and

facilitate access to global e-business sectors. Details of

the licensing requirements can be found at

www.itida.gov.eg/csp.

¶8. Also in late May, Orascom Telecom (OT) announced the

$130 million sale of its controlling stake in Libertis, a

GSM company in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and

Libertis' operator Oasis Telecom. Also in late May, Naguib

Sawiris, CEO of OT, announced the purchase of Wind, the

telecom subsidiary of Italian conglomerate Enel, by the

newly established "Weather Investments." Sawiris owns 73.9%

of Weather Investments and Enel owns the remaining shares.

OT plans to eventually transfer 51% of its shares to Weather

Investments. The total cost of the purchase was Euro 17.2

billion.

¶9. MCIT Minister Kamel made his first official visit to the

U.S. June 18-28. The delegation included the Chairman of

NTRA, the President of Telecom Egypt and representatives

from approximately 20 Egyptian IT firms. Kamel held meeting

with USG officials and on the Hill, and also met with

Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates and executives from Intel,

Cisco, and Oracle. The visit led to establishment of a U.S.-

Egypt IT consultative council. Kamel also witnessed the

signing of several business deals, including a $5 million

agreement between Egypt's QuickTel and Qualcom to service

wireless networks in Egypt. The minister also announced

that NTRA would soon issue licensing terms for Voice-over

Internet Protocol (VoIP) service in Egypt.


Energy


¶10. On May 30, President Mubarak inaugurated the liquefied

natural gas (LNG) plant at the Mediterranean Gas Complex in

Damietta. The LNG facility is owned and operated by the

Spanish Egyptian Gas Company (SEGAS), which is 80% owned by

Union Fenosa Gas (50% Union Fenosa of Spain and 50% ENI of

Italy), and 20% owned by Egyptian State Holding Companies.

The $1.3 billion facility was built by a joint venture of

Halliburton KBR, JGC Corporation of Japan, and Tecnicas

Reunidas of Spain. The output of the facility, 5.5 mt/yr,

has already been committed for the next 25 years. The

Mediterranean Gas Complex near Damietta is a joint

investment between the Italian AGIP and British Petroleum.

¶11. In mid-June, Petroleum Minister Fahmi announced that

the GOE had signed 36 new oil and gas exploration agreements

over the last year for a total investment of $250 million.

The agreements will result in the drilling of 55 new wells

in the Western Desert, the Nile Delta, and off the

Mediterranean coast and Gulf of Suez. Foreign investors in

the agreements include British Gas, Malaysian Petronas,

International Egyptian Oil Company (an Italian subsidiary of

AGIP) and Apache. Announcement of the new exploration

agreements was followed by three new oil discoveries in late

June. The largest was at Ras Gharib-Amr, a 50-year-old oil

field in the Gulf of Suez, 2 km offshore. The discovery was

the first at Ras Gharib-Amr in the last 40 years. The

second discovery was at El Tamad, approximately 90 km

northeast of Cairo. This was the first on-shore oil

discovery in the northern Nile Delta region. The third

discovery was at El Diyur in Egypt's Western Desert. Total

reserves from the new discovery were estimated at 70 million

barrels of crude oil.

¶12. Egypt-Israel Gas Agreement: On June 30, Fahmi signed

an MOU with Israeli National Infrastructures Minister

Binyamin Ben-Eliezer, clearing the way for a long-awaited

$2.5 billion commercial gas deal between Eastern

Mediterranean Gas (EMG) and the Israeli state-owned

Electrical Company (IEC). While the commercial details

remain to be determined, EMG will export approximately 25

billion cubic meters of gas over 15 years from the Egyptian

port of El Arish to the port of Askalon in Israel. EMG is

an Egyptian-registered company 25% owned by Israel's Merhav

Group. Egyptian businessman Hussein Salem owns another 65%

of EMG and the Egyptian Gas Holding Company owns the

remaining 10%.

¶13. The MOU provides a "political umbrella" for the

commercial agreement, and commits the GOE to providing gas

to EMG and the GOI to providing tax exemptions for equipment

and materials. Completion of the project is expected to

take two years. Announcement of the MOU was coordinated

with announcement of cooperation between the GOE and the

Palestinian Authority on gas exports. Headlines of some

opposition papers tried to portray the MOU as an attempt to

appease the USG and deflect pressure for further political

and democratic reform.


Aviation


¶14. In early May, Egyptian air traffic controllers went on

a "go-slow" strike, their second in the span of two months,

to protest the Ministry of Civil Aviation's penalization of

8 air traffic controllers for delays at Sharm El Sheikh

airport. The Association of Egyptian Air Traffic

Controllers threatened to bring air traffic to a total halt

if the penalties were not lifted. Controllers also demanded

a doubling of salaries over three years, better health

insurance and better promotion opportunities. The strike

ended after Minister of Civil Aviation Shafik promised to

look into the strikers' demands for better pay and

conditions. Aviation officials indicated that the

controllers conducted the go-slow in line with International

Civil Aviation Organization standards, but failed to

announce the go-slow to the airlines in advance. Unofficial

reports indicated that losses from the go-slow amounted to

$31 million.


Suez Canal and Maritime Transport


¶15. In early May, the Suez Canal Authority indicated that

revenues from Suez Canal tolls during FY 2004/2005 would

exceed $3.2 billion, compared to $2.82 billion during FY

2003/2004. During the first 9 months of FY 2004/2005 (July

2004- March 2005), revenues increased by $369 million to

$2.446 million, up 18% from the previous year. A recent

study by the Ministry of Transportation indicated that total

revenue from port facilities, excluding customs, duties and

taxes, increased in 2004 by 25% to L.E. 2.24 billion.


Economic Statistics


¶16.

Exchange Rate:

                          (05/31/05)        (06/30/05) 

Egyptian Pounds/$ Buying Selling Buying Selling

Avg. Bank/Bureau Rate 578.79 581.22 578.24 580.84

Capital Market:

                           (05/31/05)       (06/30/05) 

Capital Markets Authority Index 1644 1789

Hermes Financial Index 36344 41772

EFG Index 19599 22692

Interest Rates:

(percent, monthly comparison)

Interbank Overnight 9.49 9.55

T-bills (182 days) 9.88 8.39

T-Bond (maturing 01/06) 4.15 4.15

T-Bond (maturing 04/09) 5.50 5.50

Foreign Reserves:

(US $ billion, official gov't figures)

(04/2005) (05/2005)

18.470 18.712

Egyptian companies would be better off integrating Free/open source packages that not only help create jobs in Egypt but also give the country more control of its own. █

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