Sahar signed agreement with world bank to upgrade Egypt'sinfrastructure

CAIRO – Mena- 13 October 2018: Egypt signed on Saturday an
agreement with the World Bank to back infrastructure at cost of 300 million
dollars through proceeding with the "Sustainable Rural Sanitation Services
Program".
The agreement was inked by Minister of Investment Sahar Nasr
and World Bank Group Vice President for Middle East and North Africa Ferid
Belhaj, on the sidelines of the annual meetings of the World Bank and the
International Monetary Fund, currently held in Bali, Indonesia.
Nasr said that the deal falls within the framework of the
government's efforts to improve the infrastructure in rural areas and
most-needy governorates in addition to enhancing social protection networks for
the poor and limited-income brackets.
The project aims to complete providing 892,000 citizens in
the most needy governorates with sanitation services, Nasr said, noting that
Sharqia, Dakahlia, Damietta, Gharbia and Monufia are covered by the project.
Nasr pointed out that about 818,000 citizens have already
benefited from the project's first phase, bringing the total number of those
benefiting from it to 1.7 million.
The original $550 million program was launched in 2015 in
support of the government’s National Rural Sanitation Program, Nasr said.
Nasr underscored that investing in the human capital tops
the government's priorities.
Belhaj said that the bank's decision to invest in the
Egyptian human capital comes as a result of the reforms that Cairo has
implemented with the aim of achieving comprehensive leap in health care and
education services as well as improving social protection programs.