Egypt's Higher Education Ministry has told local universities to cover costs for students on US-funded scholarships after President Donald Trump ordered a freeze on foreign aid.
The order suspends all foreign assistance, apart from humanitarian food programmes and military assistance to Israel and Egypt, for 90 days pending a review of US aid programmes.
The move will affect 1,077 Egyptian undergraduate students in public, private and non-profit universities who received scholarships from the US Agency for International Development (USAID), including 200 at the American University in Cairo (AUC), Higher Education Ministry spokesman Adel Abdel Ghaffar told The National.
Seven Egyptian graduate students studying in the US are also affected.
The US agency informed the scholarship recipients on Saturday that its programme was being suspended for 90 days, leading to panic and an outcry on social media.
In response, Egypt's Supreme Council of Universities, a state agency, held an emergency meeting led by Higher Education Minister Ayman Ashour on Tuesday night.
Mr Ashour announced that each university would commit to covering all tuition fees and support that USAID had been providing until the end of the second term.
His ministry said that the students would not be harmed and that universities would “fully cover the scholarships” whether they were for tuition fees or housing. It called on students and their parents not to be swayed by rumours and reassured them about their future.
Mr Abdel Ghaffar dismissed reports on social media that AUC students had been forcibly removed from their residences as “mere rumours”.
However, Mohamed Yousry, 24, a computer science student at the state-run Alexandria University who received a USAID scholarship to study at the prestigious and much more expensive AUC, told The National that he and many of his classmates had received an email on Saturday from university administrators saying that they would not be housed or allowed to attend classes there for 90 days or until further notice.
“We had to pack our things very quickly and organise our own transport to our home provinces. I returned to Alexandria, which wasn't very hard but some of my colleagues from Aswan and Upper Egypt had to make much longer journeys,” Mr Yousry said.
“I am finishing up my degree by June but there are students who have just started their scholarship programmes, so even if the universities cover the costs for the next 90 days, who knows if they will continue to do so if the US decides to defund these programmes.”
The suspension of US aid programmes stoked already seething anger towards Israel among Egypt’s youth, with many students seeing it as a move to pressure Egypt to allow in Palestinians displaced by the Gaza war.
Mr Trump on Saturday suggested that Jordan and Egypt could take in about 1.5 million Gazans left homeless by Israel's destructive military campaign in the enclave, either for the short-term or permanently. Both Jordan and Egypt quickly rejected the idea.
Egypt has been one of the largest recipients of US aid since the signing in 1978 of the Camp David Accords by Egyptian president Anwar Sadat and Israeli prime minister Menachem Begin under the guidance of US president Jimmy Carter.
The deal brought an end to more than 30 years of Egyptian-Israeli hostilities and helped the country’s passage into the neoliberal global economy.
As part of the agreement, the US committed to providing substantial economic and military aid to both Egypt and Israel. Since the signing of the peace treaty, Egypt has received US aid amounting to more than $30 billion, in addition to $1.3 billion in military aid annually. The assistance has been a key component of the US-Egypt relationship and is viewed as an important means of maintaining the stability of American interests in the region.
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UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
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Yahya Al Ghassani's bio
Date of birth: April 18, 1998
Playing position: Winger
Clubs: 2015-2017 – Al Ahli Dubai; March-June 2018 – Paris FC; August – Al Wahda
The biog
Favourite book: Men are from Mars Women are from Venus
Favourite travel destination: Ooty, a hill station in South India
Hobbies: Cooking. Biryani, pepper crab are her signature dishes
Favourite place in UAE: Marjan Island
Straightforward ways to reduce sugar in your family's diet
- Ban fruit juice and sodas
- Eat a hearty breakfast that contains fats and wholegrains, such as peanut butter on multigrain toast or full-fat plain yoghurt with whole fruit and nuts, to avoid the need for a 10am snack
- Give young children plain yoghurt with whole fruits mashed into it
- Reduce the number of cakes, biscuits and sweets. Reserve them for a treat
- Don’t eat dessert every day
- Make your own smoothies. Always use the whole fruit to maintain the benefit of its fibre content and don’t add any sweeteners
- Always go for natural whole foods over processed, packaged foods. Ask yourself would your grandmother have eaten it?
- Read food labels if you really do feel the need to buy processed food
- Eat everything in moderation
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Company profile
Name: Back to Games and Boardgame Space
Started: Back to Games (2015); Boardgame Space (Mark Azzam became co-founder in 2017)
Founder: Back to Games (Mr Azzam); Boardgame Space (Mr Azzam and Feras Al Bastaki)
Based: Dubai and Abu Dhabi
Industry: Back to Games (retail); Boardgame Space (wholesale and distribution)
Funding: Back to Games: self-funded by Mr Azzam with Dh1.3 million; Mr Azzam invested Dh250,000 in Boardgame Space
Growth: Back to Games: from 300 products in 2015 to 7,000 in 2019; Boardgame Space: from 34 games in 2017 to 3,500 in 2019
The biog
Most memorable achievement: Leading my first city-wide charity campaign in Toronto holds a special place in my heart. It was for Amnesty International’s Stop Violence Against Women program and showed me the power of how communities can come together in the smallest ways to have such wide impact.
Favourite film: Childhood favourite would be Disney’s Jungle Book and classic favourite Gone With The Wind.
Favourite book: To Kill A Mockingbird for a timeless story on justice and courage and Harry Potters for my love of all things magical.
Favourite quote: “We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give.” — Winston Churchill
Favourite food: Dim sum
Favourite place to travel to: Anywhere with natural beauty, wildlife and awe-inspiring sunsets.