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Minister of International Cooperation, Head of the United States Agency for International Development Expand Strategic Partnership Through 7 agreements Worth $112 million

Expand strategic partnership through 7 agreements worth $112 million in various sectors United States is contributing an additional $22.8 million to support economic growth in Egypt Al-Mashat refers to cooperation with the United States Agency for International Development as a “strategic partnership”

Minister of International Cooperation, Dr. Rania Al-Mashat, received Mr.John Barsa, Head of the United States Agency for International Development during his first visit to Egypt at the Ministry of International Cooperation to expand the strategic partnership between the two through 7 agreements signed during the current year worth 112 million dollars. The event was held in the presence of Mr. Jonathan Cohen, the United States Ambassador to Egypt, Mrs. Leslie Reed, Director of the USAID office in Egypt, and Mrs. Sarah McCain, Senior Adviser at the US National Security Council. Minister of International Cooperation welcomed the head of the United States Agency for International Development and his accompanying delegation during his first visit to Egypt and the Middle East and Africa region as a whole, praising the cooperation and coordination that took place between the Ministry and the United States Agency for International Development during the current year to advance cooperation efforts despite the COVID-19 pandemic, which resulted in 7 agreements worth $112 million in various sectors, especially health, higher education and scientific research. To combat the COVID-19 pandemic, 51 million pounds have been provided to support civil society’s efforts such as the Egyptian Red Crescent, which Al Mashat referred as a model for cooperation between development partners and civil society. The US Agency for International Development (USAID) has delivered 250 “highly specialized” ventilators to Egypt as a donation for intensive care units in the northeastern African countries. Al-Mashat said that cooperation with the United States Agency for International Development reflects the strategic partnership between Egypt and the United States of America, and comes within the framework of the ministry’s efforts to enhance economic diplomacy through three main principles: regularly organizing multi-stakeholder platforms to ensure that all projects between development partners are streamlined and effectively coordinated; adopting a consistent Global Partnerships Narrative People&Projects&Purpose (P&P&P); and mapping ODA financing to SDGs for all projects with multilateral and bilateral development partners. “We are pleased to announce that the United States is contributing an additional $22.8 million to support economic growth in Egypt and empower women, as part of a five-year agreement to advance economic growth that benefits the nation,” John Barsa said, Head of the United States Agency for International Development in Washington. “The United States looks forward to continuing our partnership to support effective and transparent public institutions, empower women and youth, encourage cooperation between different religious communities, and ensure all Egyptians benefit from basic services,” he added. For his part, US Ambassador Jonathan Cohen said, “Over the past 40 years, the United States has invested more than $30 billion in Egypt's development. We helped provide water and sanitation services to more than 25 million Egyptians, helped digitize and develop the communications sector, bring electricity to millions of Egyptian homes and companies, preserve historical sites, help farmers, build thousands of schools, train more than 100,000 teachers, and eradicate polio. In Egypt, among other contributions. We will continue our support to propel Egypt into a prosperous future”. It is worth noting that the historical cooperation portfolio of the United States Agency for International Development in Egypt has exceeded $ 30 billion since 1978, in various sectors, most notably health, population and education, while the portfolio of projects signed since 2014 amount to about $800 million, including $ 72.5 million for the agriculture sector.