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It has following six major services: [9] (1) Local Arabic news of which target audience is those subscribers living in Egypt and covers political, social, economic, culture and sports news in the Arab world, the Middle East and internationally. (2) Press services which include features news analysis, and photo services and international sectors ...
The Board of Directors of the Authority is formed by a decision of the Prime Minister of Egypt, headed by the Minister of Military Production and membership of: [2] Vice Chairman and Managing Director. [2] Air Force Commander. [2] Commander of the Air Defense Forces. [2] Chairman of the Armed Forces Arming Authority. [2]
President Gamal Abdel Nasser made his friend Mohamed Hassanein Heikal editor-in-chief of al-Ahram in 1957, and the paper gained semi-official status. [13] On 24 May 1960, it was nationalized when Nasser passed a law eliminating the ownership of private newspapers. [9] [14] [13] Under Nasser, al-Ahram became an internationally respected paper.
The National Telecommunications Regulatory Authority (Arabic: الجهاز القومي لتنظيم الإتصالات, Al-Gehaz Al-Qawmy l-Tanzeem Al-Etisalat), commonly known as NTRA, is the Egypt government-approved regulatory and competition authority that was established in accordance of the Egyptian telecommunication regulation law No. 10/ 2003 as the national Authority equipped to ...
Website www .darelkotob .gov .eg The Egyptian National Library and Archives ( Arabic : دار الكتب والوثائق القومية ; "Dar el-Kotob") is located in Nile Corniche, Cairo and is the largest library in Egypt , followed by Al-Azhar University and the Bibliotheca Alexandrina (New Library of Alexandria).
The National Media Authority (Arabic: الهيئة الوطنية للإعلام, romanized: al-Hayʾa l-Waṭaniyya li-l-ʾIʿlām), formerly known as Egyptian State Broadcasting (ESU; Arabic: الهيئة الوطنية للإعلام, romanized: Alhayyat Alwataniat Lil'iielam), is the public broadcaster of Egypt, operated by the Egyptian government. [1]
With the expansion of official policy in establishing new communities all over Egypt, and not just the canal region, a Ministry of Reconstruction and New communities was spun off in 1978, [5] in addition to a Ministry of State for Housing, as well as keeping the Ministry of Housing, though the Ministry of State was scrapped within a year. [6]
As of 2017 the company operated 183 stores – 143 supermarkets and hypermarkets, 27 convenience stores, and 13 wholesale outlets in Saudi Arabia, and 31 stores in Egypt. [ 9 ] By 2008, Abdullah Al-Othaim Markets had completed the transformation from a private company to a publicly listed company .