Sisi unveils Egypt's 'new Suez Canal'

Initial estimates suggested new route would take up to 3 years to build, but Sisi set an ambitious target of 12 months

A cargo ship crosses a new waterway at the Suez Canal during its opening ceremony on August 6, 2015, in the port city of Ismailiya. PHOTO: AFP

ISMAILIYA:
President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi unveiled an expanded Suez Canal Thursday in a lavish ceremony, with the first ships passing through the waterway in what Egypt hopes will boost its economy and global standing.

Sisi, dressed in a ceremonial military uniform, arrived aboard a historic yacht at the head of a naval flotilla as fighter planes and helicopters flew overhead.

The former army chief, who later changed into a business suit, formally opened the $9 billion (7.9 billion euro) waterway to the cheers of hundreds of guests, including foreign dignitaries.

"Egyptians exerted massive efforts to offer to the world a gift for the sake of humanity... in very difficult economic and security conditions," said Sisi in a speech, as the first cargo ships passed through.

He pledged to defeat militancy, which has bedevilled the country since he overthrew his predecessor, Mohamed Morsi, in 2013.

Security was tight, with the Islamic State group's threat to execute a Croatian kidnapped near Cairo threatening to overshadow the celebrations, showcased by authorities as proof the country is safe.

The event in the port city of Ismailiya attended by heads of state, including French President Francois Hollande, comes two years after Morsi's overthrow.

The ouster unleashed a deadly crackdown on militants, and an insurgency has since killed hundreds of soldiers east of the Suez Canal.

IS's Egyptian affiliate had released a video on Wednesday threatening to execute hostage Tomislav Salopek, a worker with French geoscience company CGG, within 48 hours unless Egypt frees jailed Muslim women.

Sisi said "terrorist groups are trying to harm Egypt and Egyptians... Egypt's fight against terrorism is ongoing."

The Egyptian president opened the ceremony by leading the flotilla aboard a refurbished yacht once owned by the former royal family, which carried French Empress Eugenie de Montijo at the canal's 1869 inauguration.

Egyptians army planes perform during the opening ceremony of a new waterway at the Suez Canal on August 6, 2015, in the port city of Ismailiya. PHOTO: AFP


Sisi, elected last year on a promise to strengthen security and revive a dilapidated economy, broke ground on the canal project last August.

Initial estimates suggested the new route would take up to three years to build, but Sisi set an ambitious target of 12 months.

It has been touted as a landmark achievement, rivalling the digging of the original 192-kilometre (119-mile) canal, which opened in 1869 after almost a decade of work.

The new section, funded entirely by Egyptian investors, runs part of the way alongside the existing canal connecting the Red Sea and the Mediterranean.


It involved 37 kilometres of dry digging, creating what is effectively a "second lane", and widening and deepening another 35 kilometres of the existing canal.

It will cut the waiting period for vessels from 18 hours to 11.

By 2023, the number of ships using the canal will increase to 97 per day from 49 now, according to government projections.

Officials hope the new waterway will more than double Suez earnings from $5.3 billion expected at the end of 2015 to $13.2 billion in 2023.

Analysts, however, were sceptical over the targets.

"The first priority for shipowners and traders is to cut costs, not speed. The trend in recent years has been for ships to travel at lower-than-normal speeds just to... save on their fuel bills," said Ralph Leszczynski, research head at Italian shipbrokers Banchero Costa.

Thursday's guests included Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas, King Abdullah II of Jordan, Yemen's exiled President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi and Kuwaiti Emir Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Sabah.

Newly acquired French Rafale warplanes participated in the fly-past.

Banners reading "New Suez Canal: Egypt's Gift to the World" and "The Egyptian Miracle," as well as hundreds of national flags, graced the streets of Cairo and Ismailiya.

Dozens of buses ferried invitees to the site of the ceremony as security forces deployed in Ismailiya.

Waving Egypt's red, white and black flag, a crowd gathered at Cairo's Tahrir Square -- epicentre of protests that ousted both Morsi and his predecessor Hosni Mubarak.

"On June 30 (2013) we changed the course of history; today we are changing the geography of the world," said jubilant tour operator Ibrahim el-Khatab, referring to the day when millions protested against Morsi.

The waterway is a cornerstone for Sisi to boost his regime's legitimacy after a deadly crackdown on dissent.

"The ability to accomplish such an economic project is part of cementing this legitimacy," said Amr Adly, of the Carnegie Middle East Center.

Militants have killed hundreds of policemen and soldiers, mostly in the Sinai Peninsula that lies between Israel, the Gaza Strip and the Suez Canal.

The waterway is part of a comprehensive project to develop the area adjacent to the canal into an industrial hub.
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