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Jihad and jokes? Iraqis aren’t laughing

By - Apr 24,2021 - Last updated at Apr 24,2021

By Ammar Karim and Sarah Benhaida
Agence France-Presse

BAGHDAD — A camera follows a celebrity visiting an Iraqi family displaced by conflict, when they’re ambushed by terrorists. The star is convinced they’re done for until troops come to the rescue.

What looks like a close shave is, in fact, a candid camera-style television show airing during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan that takes tricking celebrities for laughs to a new level.

And it’s causing a scandal in Iraq, along with accusations of bad taste.

The scene is the same every time: A celebrity, invited for a charitable project, visits the home of a family said to have escaped the clutches of the  Daesh  group.

Once inside, actors disguised as terrorists pounce. The terrorists may be fake, but the pleas of the trapped celebrities are very real.

When star footballer Alaa Mhawi appeared on the show called “Tanneb Rislan”, he found himself on his knees, blindfolded, begging for his life.

“I’m your brother, I’m Iraqi and I represent the whole nation,” he shouts, on the verge of tears.

But once the ruse is revealed, the celebrities can’t complain too much.

The series is underwritten by the powerful state-sponsored Hashed Al Shaabi paramilitary coalition.

Its fighters were central to a grinding military campaign that by mid-2017 had dislodged Daesh from the string of cities it seized three years earlier.

 

‘This isn’t entertainment’ 

 

And these paramilitaries, still armed, have their own role in the show, saving the day.

At the end of the episode featuring Mhawi, the international footballer also had to suffer a professional putdown.

“You fly the Iraqi flag on the football pitch, but the Hashed, the army and police, they do it by sacrificing martyrs,” the presenter said.

Nessma, an actress in her fifties, didn’t plead for her life. Instead, she passed out after a fake explosive belt was strapped to her waist.

She stayed unconscious for several minutes until the presenter, in Hashed uniform, emptied a bottle of water on her face.

“This isn’t entertainment,” Bilal Al Mosuli, a resident of Mosul, the self-proclaimed “capital” of Daesh in Iraq from 2014 to 2017, wrote on Twitter.

Another Iraqi, Ahmed Abderradi, expressed disbelief at the show on Facebook.

“Next year, we’ll have Saddam”, he joked bitterly.

“Or we can throw guests into a river like the victims of Speicher,” he wrote, referring to the 2014 Camp Speicher massacre, when Daesh executed 1,700 Shiite conscripts and dumped their bodies in the Tigris.

 

‘Free advertising’ 

 

For years, entrapping stars has become a staple of primetime Ramadan shows on Arab satellite channels.

But this is the first time an Iraqi programme has combined the formula with “terrorism”, which is still a real threat in Iraq.

“I don’t see what pleasure you could get watching these people being tortured in this way,” another viewer wrote on social media.

The programme also broadcasts mock executions and shootings “with blanks”, according to a disclaimer at the start.

For others, however, the show salutes anti-Daesh fighters.

“But it’s possible to show the bravery of the Hashed and Iraqi troops without introducing terrorism,” tweeted Noor Ghazi, an Iraqi living in the United States.

Violence is still a fact of life in Iraq.

The home of the so-called displaced family in the show is located in the agricultural belt outside Baghdad where Daesh sleeper cells still intimidate and extort locals.

According to social media user Hamed Al Daamy, “the show is giving free advertising to Daesh and other terrorist groups”.

A writer of the show, Dargham Abu Rghif, has sprung to its defence.

“The scenes are harsh but... if Daesh had won, artists would have had a far harder life, and all Iraqis too,” he wrote on Facebook.

 

Sudan warns of legal action against Ethiopia over dam

By - Apr 24,2021 - Last updated at Apr 24,2021

KHARTOUM — Sudan warned on Friday it could take legal action against Ethiopia if it goes ahead with plans to fill a mega-dam on the Blue Nile without a deal with Khartoum and Cairo.

Water Minister Yasser Abbas also said in a tweet that Ethiopia has raised “objections” to an invitation by Sudan to attend three-way talks to discuss the controversial dam.

Egypt, Sudan and Ethiopia have been locked in inconclusive talks for nearly a decade over the filling and operation of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) which broke ground in 2011.

Cairo has regarded the dam as an existential threat to its water supplies, while Khartoum fears its own dams would be harmed if Ethiopia fills the reservoir without a deal.

Last week, Sudan’s Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok invited his Egyptian and Ethiopian counterparts to a closed meeting after recent African Union-sponsored negotiations failed to produce a deal.

“Ethiopia has objected to the invitation of Sudanese Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok for a three-way summit and we see that there is no justification for that,” Abbas tweeted.

Addis Ababa announced last July that it had filled part of the barrage with a second stage due to take place this coming July, even if no agreement has been with Cairo and Khartoum.

If Ethiopia goes ahead with the filling, Sudan “would file lawsuits against the Italian company constructing the dam and the Ethiopian government”, Abbas warned.

He said the lawsuits would highlight that the “environmental and social impact as well as the dangers of the dam” have not been taken into adequate consideration.

The tensions over the dam come as Sudan’s relations with Egypt warm while its relations with Ethiopia have been hit by a dispute over the use of the Fashaga farmland near their common border.

In March, Sudan said it has accepted an offer by the United Arab Emirates to mediate with Ethiopia over GERD and the contested border region.

Abbas said the UAE’s initiative included investment opportunities in the Fashaga region as well as “unofficial bid to bridge the gap in views with regard to GERD”.

 

Sinkholes fill Turkey's breadbasket in drought

By - Apr 22,2021 - Last updated at Apr 22,2021

This aerial photo taken April 9shows the shore of the southwestern Turkey Salda Lake, in Burdur province (AFP photo)

By Raziye Akkoc
Agence France-Presse


KARAPINAR, Turkey — Sinkholes wide enough to swallow a bus dot the drought-stricken breadbasket of the Turkish plains, worrying farmers as they spread and creep closer to residential homes.

"The drought situation is getting worse," said farmer Tahsin Gundogdu, whose harvest includes potatoes he sells to the US food giant PepsiCo.

The 57-year-old has seen the huge holes yawn open in the past 10 to 15 years as the overuse of groundwater for irrigation takes its toll.

Dizzyingly deep, they appear when underground caverns created by drought can no longer contain the weight of the layer of soil above.

This puts farmers in a bind.

Attempts to get water by other means are more expensive, cutting farmers' incomes. But continued reliance on groundwater will likely make the problem only worse.

Professor Fetullah Arik has counted around 600 sinkholes in the Konya plain, where he heads the Sinkhole Research Centre at the Konya Technical University — nearly double the 350 counted last year.

'Worse than Covid'

Experts want the government to do more to address extreme drought, blaming the lack of a proper water management policy for Turkey's woes.

Trying to cut groundwater use, farmers have been forced to water their fields more, leading to higher electricity bills.

"We usually would water the land twice a year but now we're doing it five or six times," said Hazim Sezer, a 57-year-old farmer in Karapinar.

But Gundogdu said some farmers still turn to illegally using groundwater for their crops.

If not addressed, drought will hurt farmers and consumers "as much as, if not worse" than the economic shock of the coronavirus pandemic, said Baki Remzi Suicmez, head of Turkey's Chamber of Agricultural Engineers (ZMO).

"Until last year, we had never seen drought like this," farmer Kamil Isikli agreed, adding he was more optimistic for 2021 after rain fell earlier this year.

"Farmers no longer have enough money from one month to the next to pay their bills," Isikli said. "They can't afford anything anymore."

Sezer urged the government to create underground systems that redirect water to the plains that would otherwise end up in the seas.

Murat Akbulut, head of ZMO's Konya branch, said this could offer a "significant solution" for Konya, whose Beysehir Lake has seen its water reserves shrink to 123 million tonnes from 450 million tonnes in 2020.

This drop "will lead to real irrigation issues for the plain", Akbulut said.

Nearly 77 per cent of Turkey's water is consumed by the agricultural sector, Suicmez told AFP.

 

Hope for spring rain 

 

Turkey is actually facing two types of drought.

The first is meteorological, due to dry weather, and the second is hydrological, which means water levels are low in streams, reservoirs and groundwater levels.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan hosted his first water forum last month, promising to "renew and improve the agricultural irrigation systems".

Suicmez said a lot depended on the weather in April and May, because "if there isn't enough rain in those months, in nearly all areas where there is dry farming, the risk of agricultural drought will continue".

But even abundant spring rain will not make the problem go away, Suicmez warned.

This winter also saw fears over low water levels in dams, although Agriculture Minister Bekir Pakdemirli insisted last month the problem had been solved by rainfall.

He also suggested Turkey was primarily suffering from the effects of rising temperatures and climate change.

But Suicmez said while this was true, it was "not right" to blame everything on global events.

"We cannot say: 'Oh there's climate change, that's why there's drought', when there are concrete reasons for it," Suicmez said.

Turkey's 'Maldives' at risk 

The drought's impact is felt especially severely in the lakes region of Turkey's southwest, geology engineer Servet Cevni said.

Experts warn Salda Lake, which NASA believes could provide clues to a crater on Mars it has just started exploring with the Perseverence rover, is also suffering.

Described as "Turkey's Maldives" because of turquoise waters and white sand, its shoreline has receded by up to 30 metres  in the past 10 years, according to the local mayor.

"We don't have a single lake that we can say is in a good state in terms of water in Burdur province. They're either at risk or in a really bad state," Cevni said.

The larger Burdur Lake closer to the city centre has seen water recede by 11 kilometres, he said, stressing the need for an "urgent water policy".

"Wasting water is as serious an issue as killing someone. The punishments should be just as serious," he said.

Israel strikes Syria after attack near secretive nuclear site

By - Apr 22,2021 - Last updated at Apr 22,2021

Mobile artillery cannons group at a position in the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights on Thursday (AFP photo)

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — A Syrian officer was killed and three soldiers wounded Thursday in strikes launched by Israel after a missile was fired towards a secretive nuclear site in Israel, a monitor said.

Since the outbreak of Syria's civil war in 2011, Israel has routinely carried out aerial raids on the country, mostly targeting Iranian and Lebanese Hizbollah forces as well as government troops.

Its latest salvo was launched in the early hours of Thursday after a missile was fired from Syria towards southern Israel, where the Dimona nuclear reactor is located.

Sirens sounded in Abu Qrenat, a Bedouin village not far from the nuclear site, the Israeli military said, before it responded by striking multiple defence batteries across the border.

The exchange of fire comes less than two weeks after Iran accused its arch-foe Israel of "terrorism" following an explosion at the Islamic republic's Natanz nuclear facility.

"A surface-to-air missile was fired from Syria to Israel's southern Negev," the Israel forces tweeted.

"In response, we struck the battery from which the missile was launched and additional surface-to-air batteries in Syria."

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based war monitor, said the Israeli retaliatory strikes killed a Syrian officer and seriously wounded three soldiers.

"An officer with the rank of a lieutenant in the regime's forces was killed in the Israeli bombardments... targeting an air defence base in the Dmeir region east of the capital," it said.

Syrian state news agency SANA said the Israeli fire came from the Golan Heights and was targeted "towards positions in the vicinity of Damascus".

The strikes destroyed air defence batteries, the observatory said.

The Dmeir area, roughly 40 kilometres northeast of the Syrian capital, is believed to be home to weapons depots belonging to militias loyal to Iran, it added.

SANA reported "some material losses" but said Syrian air defence batteries intercepted most of the missiles.

Israel is considered the leading military power in the Middle East and is widely believed to possess its sole nuclear arsenal.

It has never disclosed its atomic arsenal, but foreign experts say the Israel has between 100 to 300 nuclear warheads.

There were no immediate reports of any casualties or damage on the Israeli side.

 

Nuclear facility 

 

Israel is investigating its response to the incoming projectile.

The army said an initial probe showed it did not intercept the surface-to-air missile.

Israeli troops examined fragments of an exploded missile that reached the community of Ashalim, some 40 kilometres  from Dimona.

Soldiers were still searching for more pieces of the projectile in the late morning.

Israel has long sought to prevent bitter foe Iran from establishing itself in war-torn Syria.

Israel's Iron Dome missile defence system has thwarted hundreds of attacks from Syria and the Gaza Strip in the past decade.

The Israeli army has carried out hundreds of strikes in on its war-battered northern neighbour, but it has rarely publicly acknowledged them.

The missile launch comes as tensions run high between Israel and Iran, which had vowed to avenge the April 11 attack of its Natanz uranium enrichment plant.

Iran accused Israel of being behind the explosion that hit Natanz's electricity distribution.

Israel did not claim responsibility for the incident, but unsourced media reports in the country attributed it to the Israeli security services carrying out a "cyber operation".

The New York Times, quoting unnamed US and Israeli intelligence officials, said there had been "an Israeli role" in the attack.

Israel strongly opposes a landmark 2015 agreement that gave Iran relief from sanctions in return for curbs on its suspect nuclear programme.

US President Joe Biden's administration is trying to revive the accord, which has been in tatters since his predecessor Donald Trump withdrew from it in 2018.

Israel says Iran is trying to build an atomic bomb, though the Islamic republic says its nuclear programme is for peaceful purposes.

 

Pope tells Hariri of hopes of visiting Lebanon

By - Apr 22,2021 - Last updated at Apr 22,2021

This photo taken and handout on Thursday by The Vatican Media shows Pope Francis and Lebanon's prime minister-designate Saad Hariri exchanging gifts during a private audience in The Vatican (AFP photo)


VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis reaffirmed his desire to visit Lebanon in a meeting on Thursday with prime minister-designate Saad Hariri, but the latter said it would only happen once a new government was formed.

During a private audience lasting around 30 minutes, the 84-year-old pontiff said he would like to visit Lebanon "as soon as the conditions are favourable", according to a Vatican statement.

He expressed his "closeness to the Lebanese people, who are experiencing a moment of great difficulty and uncertainty" and called upon "all political forces to urgently commit themselves to the benefit of the nation".

Hariri, a three-time premier selected in October to form a new government, told Lebanese media afterwards that the pope would visit "only after the formation of a government".

"That's a message for the Lebanese, that we must form a government, so that all the forces and all the people come together, so that we can take Lebanon forward with our friends," he said after the meeting, in comments broadcast on Lebanese television.

Pope Francis recently made a historic trip to Iraq, during which he repeated his desire to visit Lebanon.

The country was plunged into crisis following last year's devastating port blast in Beirut, which killed more than 200 people and forced the cabinet of outgoing premier Hassan Diab to resign.

It compounded Lebanon's worst economic crisis since the 1975-1990 civil war, but political leaders have yet to agree on a new government.

 

Egypt to produce 40 million doses of Sputnik V jab

By - Apr 22,2021 - Last updated at Apr 22,2021


CAIRO — Egyptian firm Minapharm announced on Thursday it will produce 40 million doses of the Russian vaccine Sputnik V to combat the Covid-19 pandemic.

It was the first partnership for the production of Sputnik V in the Middle East and North Africa, Minapharm said in a joint statement with the Russian Direct Investment Fund.

Rollout of the vaccine intended for "global distribution" was expected later this year, said Minapharm and the RDIF, which backed the financing of the vaccine.

Like the AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson coronavirus vaccines, which have been linked to rare blood clotting, the Sputnik jab uses adapted strains of the adenovirus that causes the common cold.

But Russia's state-run Gamaleya research institute, which developed the Sputnik vaccine, said this month that there was no risk of blot clots from its jab.

"The Russian vaccine is highly efficient and trusted by regulators around the world and makes a huge contribution in the fight against coronavirus," RDIF head Kirill Dmitriev was quoted as saying in the statement.

Russia's registration of Sputnik in August last year triggered criticism both at home and abroad over the fast-track procedure, but a leading medical journal said this year it was safe and highly effective.

The vaccine has been registered for use in dozens of countries.

Egypt, the Arab world's most populous country, said this month it was preparing to produce 80 million doses of the Chinese Sinovac vaccine through state-firm Vacsera.

Cairo is also in the final stages of agreeing to purchase 20 million doses of China's Sinopharm vaccine, according to the health ministry, with a shipment of 500,000 shots expected this month.

Egypt, with a population of over 100 million, has recorded nearly 219,000 positive cases including more than 12,000 deaths.

 

Iraq COVID-19 cases surpass one million — health ministry

By - Apr 22,2021 - Last updated at Apr 22,2021

BAGHDAD — COVID-19 infections in Iraq surpassed one million on Wednesday, the health ministry said, a figure unmatched in the Arab world, in a country that has long faced medical shortages.

The ministry reported 8,696 new coronavirus infections and 38 deaths in the past 24 hours, bringing the total since the start of the country's outbreak in February last year to 1,001,854, including 15,098 deaths.

The ministry has said it carries out around 40,000 tests daily from a population of 40 million.

Iraq's hospitals have been worn down by decades of conflict and poor investment, with shortages in medicines and hospital beds.

Those patients who can often prefer to source oxygen tanks for treatment at home, rather than go to overcrowded and run-down hospitals.

The country launched its vaccination campaign last month, and has received nearly 650,000 doses of different vaccines — the majority by donation or through the Covax programme, which is supporting lower and middle income nations to procure vaccines.

As of Wednesday, 274,343 people had received at least one dose, the ministry said.

Erdogan sacks minister in row over family contracts

By - Apr 21,2021 - Last updated at Apr 21,2021

ISTANBUL — Turkish President Recept Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday sacked his trade minister after she was accused of awarding lucrative contracts to companies headed by her husband.

The replacement of Ruhsar Pekcan with influential AKP ruling party member Mehmet Mus was announced without an explanation in the official government newspaper.

But it came just days after the publication of articles on the OdaTV website implicating the former minister.

The stories accused Pekcan of awarding two companies run by her husband contracts for the purchase of disinfectant products worth 9 million liras — more than 1 million dollars at the current exchange rate.

Pekcan confirmed the purchase on Tuesday but argued that the companies were chosen “in compliance with the rules” and based on price.

Her sacking comes as public discontent mounts with the Turkish government’s overall handling of the economy during the coronavirus pandemic.

Erdogan’s overhaul of his economic team in November temporarily helped the Turkish lira recover from historic lows against the dollar and euro.

But the lira’s troubles resumed after Erdogan replaced a market-friendly central bank chief he had appointed in that reshuffle with former ruling party lawmaker Sahap Kavcioglu last month.

The November government changes also saw Erdogan’s powerful but controversial son-in-law Berat Albayrak part with his finance ministry post.

Economist believe that rumours of Albayrak’s imminent return to the government have also dented foreign investor confidence and hurt the lira.

 

Large-scale Houthi offensive roils Yemen’s oil-rich Marib

By - Apr 21,2021 - Last updated at Apr 21,2021

People displaced by conflict receive food aid in the Khokha district of Yemen’s war-ravaged western province of Hodeida, on Tuesday (AFP photo)

MARIB, Yemen — Peering through binoculars, a Yemeni commander scans a forbidding desert moonscape for lurking Houthi rebels, who are ramping up a bloody offensive to seize the strategic oil-rich region of Marib.

The outcome of the scorched-earth battles raging around Marib city, the Saudi-backed Yemeni government’s last northern stronghold, could significantly alter the future course of a conflict now in its seventh year.

The loss of Marib, gripped by a worsening humanitarian crisis, would be a heavy blow to the government, giving the Iran-backed rebels more leverage in any future negotiations or even spur them to push further south, observers say.

Hundreds of combatants have been killed since the large-scale offensive began in February, according to local sources.

Loyalist commanders say the rebels are sending wave after wave of fighters towards frontlines around Marib city, the regional capital, from seemingly inexhaustible reserves.

“The Houthi strategy is... aimed at exhausting [us],” a Yemeni commander told AFP at the sand-swept Al Kanais battlefront in the north of the city, where loyalist soldiers crouched in sandbag-ringed foxholes and heavy machine guns were loaded on the rear of pickup trucks.

In a pattern emerging across multiple frontlines, the commander said the Houthis are pushing zealous waves of young recruits, many of them children, with the goal of wearing out loyalist forces and depleting their ammunition.

Hours-long gun battles are typically followed by a brief lull to collect the dead bodies.

Then a more lethal wave of experienced Houthi fighters moves in under the cover of constant shelling, the commander said of a desperate rebel strategy that is heaping pressure on loyalist forces.

“The Houthis don’t care how many of their men die,” he added, a point echoed by other Yemeni officials, including Marib’s Governor Sultan Al Aradah.

“They are sacrificing the people of Yemen... But they will not be able to reach Marib no matter the price we have to pay,” added the commander, who requested that his name be withheld.

 

‘Sacrifice young men’ 

 

Marib is already paying a huge price since the Houthis, who set their sights on taking the area last year, relaunched their offensive in February on the back of large reinforcements.

The city of Marib and some outlying areas make up the last pockets of government-held territory in the north, the rest of which is under rebel control, including the capital Sanaa.

Non-aligned observers of the conflict are alarmed at the high casualties around Marib, with one international official telling AFP “the Houthis seem to have a lot of fighters to throw into the battle”.

“At the end of the day, the Houthis will say, ‘We still have fighters... and we can sacrifice people and young men’,” this official said.

An AFP journalist travelled to Marib from Saudi Arabia in an Apache helicopter at the invitation of the Riyadh-led military coalition battling the rebels.

The low-flying aircraft hovered above sprawling oil fields, a natural gas bottling plant and a modern dam that supplies freshwater to the parched region, assets that make Marib a prized target.

The city itself is splashed with posters of fallen commanders and brimming with checkpoints that watch against Houthi infiltrators and sleeper cells.

Marib is home to hundreds of thousands of civilians already uprooted by Yemen’s ongoing conflict — and they face the prospect of being displaced again in a country with fewer and fewer safe havens.

“My husband has lost his mind” due to war and constant displacement, said Hala Al Aswad, a 40-year-old mother of four sheltering in Al Suweida, one of the nearly 140 camps that have sprung up in Marib.

“He keeps beating the children.”

The escalation in hostilities has displaced 13,600 people in Marib this year, according to the UN refugee agency, putting a heavy strain on the city in the midst of a second coronavirus wave.

Lacking clean water and electricity, the makeshift settlements are overflowing and camp residents say they have repeatedly come under Houthi shelling.

One woman in Al Suweida, on the edge of the city, said she suffered a miscarriage due to the strains of war.

Another woman parted her toddler’s hair to reveal a shrapnel wound on her scalp. As she spoke, one child held up a piece of twisted metal from what she said was the wreckage of a shell that hit her camp.

 

‘Sons of desert’ 

 

“A ceasefire is necessary,” pleaded Arafat Asubari, a 31-year-old camp resident, who is a father of six.

If the fighting doesn’t stop, he said, “we will all die here”.

In March, the Houthis rejected Riyadh’s call for a nationwide ceasefire. They have instead escalated missile and drone strikes deep inside Saudi Arabia, which provides air support to Marib’s loyalist forces.

Officials in Saudi Arabia criticise US President Joe Biden’s decision to rescind a terrorist designation imposed on the Houthis by his predecessor Donald Trump, saying the concession has emboldened the rebels.

Western officials defend Biden’s decision, saying the designation, which came late in the Trump presidency, would have worsened Yemen’s humanitarian crisis by further impeding access, while doing nothing to blunt the Houthis’ military ambitions.

But one Western official said he slammed the Marib offensive as a “big mistake” during direct talks with Houthi negotiators, drawing parallels with stalemated fighting during World War I that only added to widespread suffering.

The plea, the official told AFP, fell on deaf ears.

Meanwhile, Marib’s tribes have responded to local calls to send their men to reinforce frontlines alongside the loyalists, with many saying that the terrain offered them an edge over the Houthis, known to be more adept at mountain warfare.

Describing themselves as “sons of the desert”, many Marib tribesmen see a military advantage in a largely flat desert landscape dotted with scrubby bushes.

“Let them [Houthis] come,” said the frontline commander, quoting a tribal elder from Marib.

“We will kill them all.”

 

Egypt sacks rail authority chief after string of deadly accidents

By - Apr 21,2021 - Last updated at Apr 21,2021

People gather by an overturned train carriage at the scene of a railway accident in the city of Toukh in Egypt's central Nile Delta province of Qalyubiya on April 18 (AFP photo)

CAIRO — Egypt's railways chief was sacked on Tuesday following a string of deadly train disasters, two days after the latest accident that cost 11 lives.

"The goal of these decisions is not merely about leadership changes of the authority but are in line with the next stage which demands...a complete upgrade of the railway network," the transport ministry said.

The changes "under way aim to provide better services, working around the clock to serve commuters and to upgrade... this essential service which transports millions of passengers yearly", it said in a statement.

Transport Minister Kamel El Wazir’s shuffle of 10 top officials in Egypt’s embattled railways authority, including its head Ashraf Raslan, follows an uproar in the Arab world’s most populous country over mismanagement of dilapidated train lines.

Calls on social media have urged the minister himself to step down but he has stood firm.

Egyptian rail accidents are mostly blamed on poor infrastructure and maintenance.

On Sunday, 11 people were killed and scores injured in a farming town in the fertile Nile Delta outside the capital when four train carriages came off the tracks.

Last month, at least 20 people died and nearly 200 were injured in a crash in southern Egypt, according to the latest official toll, which authorities have revised several times.

Fifteen people were also injured earlier this month when two train carriages derailed near Minya Al Qamh, north of Cairo.

Wazir, a former general, was named transport minister after a 2019 train collision that was blamed on human error.

“We have a problem with the human element,” he said last month on a television talk show, pledging to set up an automated network by 2024.

President Abdel Fattah Al Sisi has vowed to hold to account those responsible for the recurrent deadly accidents on Egypt’s railways in recent years.

One of the deadliest came in 2002 when a fire ripped through a crowded train south of the capital, killing 373 people.

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