First Mahlab Cabinet
The cabinet of Egyptian Prime Minister Ibrahim Mahlab was sworn in on 1 March 2014.[1] The cabinet is made up of 31 ministers.[1]
Ibrahim Mahlab Cabinet | |
---|---|
Cabinet of Egypt | |
Date formed | 1 March 2014 |
Date dissolved | 8 June 2014 |
People and organisations | |
Head of state | Adly Mansour |
Head of government | Ibrahim Mahlab |
Member party | Independent Supported by: Egypt Party Wafd Party |
History | |
Predecessor | Beblawi Cabinet |
Successor | Second Mahlab Cabinet |
Cabinet members
Office | Name | Party |
---|---|---|
Prime Minister | Ibrahim Mahlab[2] | Independent |
Minister of Defence | Sedki Sobhy[3] | Military |
Minister of Planning and International Cooperation | Ashraf El-Araby[2] | Independent |
Minister of Higher Education and Scientific Research | Wael El-Degwi[2] | Independent |
Minister of Interior | Mohamed Ibrahim Moustafa[2] | Police |
Minister of Foreign Affairs | Nabil Fahmy[2] | Independent[4] |
Minister of Military Production | Ibrahim Younis[2] | Independent |
Minister of Finance | Hani Qadri Demian[2] | Independent |
Minister of Antiquities | Mohamed Ibrahim Ali al-Sayed[2] | Independent |
Minister of Environment | Laila Rashed Iskandar[2] | Independent |
Minister of Local Development | Adel Labib[2] | Independent |
Minister of Culture | Mohamed Arab[2] | Independent |
Minister of Transitional Justice | Amin Al-Mahdy[2] | Independent |
Minister of Justice | Nayer Adel-Moneim Othman[2] | Independent |
Minister of Education | Mahmoud Abo El-Nasr[2] | Independent |
Minister of Transportation | Ibrahim El-Demairy[2] | Independent |
Minister of Electricity and Energy | Mohamed Shaker[2] | Independent |
Minister of Tourism | Hisham Zazou[2] | Independent |
Minister of Agriculture and Land Reclamation | Ayman Abu Hadid[2] | Independent |
Minister of Communications and Information Technology | Atef Helmy[2] | Independent |
Minister of Information | Durriyah Sharaf Al Din[2] | Independent |
Minister of Petroleum | Sherif Ismail[2] | Independent |
Minister of Water Resources and Irrigation | Mohamed Abdel Muttalib[2] | Independent |
Minister of Housing, Utilities and Urban Development | Mostafa Madbouly[2] | Independent |
Ministry of Supply | Khaled Hanafy[2] | Independent |
Minister of Manpower | Nahed Ashri[2] | Independent |
Minister of Religious Endowment (Awqaf) | Mukhtar Gomaa[2] | Independent |
Minister of Health | Adel El-Adawi[2] | Independent |
Minister of Civil Aviation | Mohammed Hassan Kamal[2] | Independent |
Ministry of Social Solidarity | Ghada Wali[2] | Independent |
Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment | Mounir Fakhry Abdel Nour[2] | Wafd Party[5] |
Minister of Sports and Youth | Khaled Abdel Aziz[2] | Egypt Party[5] |
gollark: Can we call any AP flooding the [dragon]pocalypse from now on?
gollark: Ah, yes, the nocturnepocalypse.
gollark: True, true.
gollark: What, you think they were accidentally closed and he hasn't fixed it?
gollark: Presumably them being *closed* was deliberate; easier than actually fixing it.
References
- "New cabinet, led by Ibrahim Mehleb, sworn in". Egypt Independent. 1 March 2014. Archived from the original on 8 July 2016. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- "Egypt's new cabinet sworn in". Ahram Online. 1 March 2014. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- "BREAKING l Sedki Sobhy promoted to general army chief". Aswat Masriya. 26 March 2014. Archived from the original on 27 March 2014. Retrieved 26 March 2014.
- Mikhail, Amira (18 July 2013). "Key Positions in Beblawi's Interim Government". Atlantic Council. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- "UPDATED PROFILES: Ministers in Egypt's new cabinet". Ahram Online. 1 March 2014. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
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