The U.S. sent its biggest-ever trade delegation to Egypt, the latest sign that the allies have repaired the rift that followed the army’s ouster of an elected president last year.
Executives from about 70 companies, including Apache Corp. and Coca-Cola Co., held talks with officials in Cairo to explore opportunities in a country struggling to recover from more than three years of unrest. The mission, organized by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, also met with President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi, the former general who was elected in May after leading the overthrow of his Islamist predecessor, Mohamed Morsi.
The U.S. cut some of its annual $1.3 billion military aid to Egypt after the army takeover, though without labeling it a coup. The American position has softened amid efforts to build a regional alliance, which El-Sisi’s Egypt has vowed to join, against Islamist militants. Secretary of State John Kerry said in June that full aid would resume soon.
The reconciliation has angered rights activists who blame El-Sisi for the harshest crackdown on freedoms and political dissent in decades. The U.S. trade mission is “deeply troubling,” according to Sarah Leah Whitson, director of the Middle East and North Africa at Human Rights Watch.
“The Egyptian government is desperate for just this kind of international pat on the back and it’s very eager to demonstrate that everything is back to normal in Egypt,” she said in a phone interview.
Activists Targeted
Since Morsi was removed from office amid protests against his one-year rule, security forces have killed hundreds of his supporters, and courts have jailed activists after trials that human rights workers said were flawed.
The government says it’s fighting against terrorism amid a surge in militant attacks. It blames most of the violence on Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood, which denies the charge and says it’s committed to seeking change peacefully.
Eddie Vasquez, a spokesman for the State Department’s Near East Bureau, said U.S. concerns “regarding Egypt and human rights and restrictions on civil society are well known, and we continue to engage with the government on those issues.”
“International investment in Egypt’s economy supports the Egyptian people,” he said in an e-mail. “Egypt’s economic and workforce development is vital to its long-term stability. A stable Egypt is in the United States’ security interests.”
Struggling Economy
El-Sisi inherited an economy stuck in the worst slowdown in two decades, and one of the Middle East’s biggest budget deficits.
There are signs that the worst may be over. Economic growth accelerated to 3.7 percent in the three months that ended in June, from 2.5 percent in the previous quarter, and more companies have announced plans to raise capital through share sales. El-Sisi cut fuel subsidies soon after his election, a move welcomed by investors.
Curt Ferguson, head of Coca-Cola Co.’s Middle East and North Africa division, who attended the meeting with El-Sisi, said the talks were strictly about business.
“Politics were out of it,” he said in an interview. “Investors look at countries like a bank: you want stability, you want the ability to withdraw funds when you want to, you want to be able to get a return. We see that being enhanced” under Egypt’s current leadership, he said.
Not Sustainable
Investment Minister Ashraf Salman told the delegation that the government is working on laws to make it easier for companies to do business. Mounir Fakhry Abdel Nour, the minister for industry and trade, said there’s a plan to liberalize electricity prices, according to the state-run Middle East News Agency.
Michael Hanna, a senior fellow at The Century Foundation, a U.S.-based think tank, said the mission reflects U.S. efforts to bring ties back to normal. Egypt, on the other hand, wants to build a relationship “based on economic ties and is much less interested in other aspects,” he said by phone.
“It’s highly unlikely that this is a sustainable basis going forward,” he said.
Source: Bloomberg