French President Francois Hollande said in Cairo on Monday that Egypt faces three main challenges to its development – security, demography, and geography.
Speaking on the second day of his three-day visit to Cairo, Hollande described the first challenge as “a security challenge in a region that suffers from disasters, tragedies, deprivation and terrorism.”
The second challenge is related to Egypt’s population of 91 million, which increases by an average of two million a year.
“This demographic renewal is a burden when there’s a lack of preparation and infrastructure to face this [population] increase,” the French president said during the Egyptian-French Economic Forum, alongside his counterpart President Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi.
The French president said the third challenge is a geographic challenge; although Egypt is connected to the Suez Canal, Egyptians should expand to other parts of the country.
President al-Sisi on his part said that Europe’s view of the Middle East is “unfair” to the region.
“You look at what is happening in the Middle East from your European scope and this is a great injustice,” the Egyptian president stated.
“You should look at what is happening in the region from our scope and culture,” al-Sisi added.
El-Sisi also touched on the Egyptian-French economic relationship, describing France as one of Egypt’s important partners.
“Egypt is a country that aims to develop and stand on its feet and take its position amongst the modern nations as a democratic modern state,” al-Sisi announced.
During the forum, 30 memorandums of understandings of cooperation between the two countries were signed.
source: Ahram Online