Egypt is the
most populous
country in the
Arab world and
the second-most
populous on the
African
Continent.
Nearly all of
the country's 70
million people
live in Cairo
and Alexandria;
elsewhere on the
banks of the
Nile; in the
Nile delta,
which fans out
north of Cairo;
and along the
Suez Canal.
These regions
are among the
world's most
densely
populated,
containing an
average of over
3,820 persons
per square mile
(1,540 per sq.
km.), as
compared to 181
persons per sq.
mi. for the
country as a
whole.
Small communities spread throughout the desert regions of Egypt are
clustered around
oases and
historic trade
and
transportation
routes. The
government has
tried with mixed
success to
encourage
migration to
newly irrigated
land reclaimed
from the desert.
However, the
proportion of
the population
living in rural
areas has
continued to
decrease as
people move to
the cities in
search of
employment and a
higher standard
of living.
The Egyptians
are a fairly
homogeneous
people of
Hamitic origin.
Mediterranean
and Arab
influences
appear in the
north, and there
is some mixing
in the south
with the Nubians
of northern
Sudan. Ethnic
minorities
include a small
number of
Bedouin Arab
nomads in the
eastern and
western deserts
and in the
Sinai, as well
as some
50,000-100,000
Nubians
clustered along
the Nile in
Upper (southern)
Egypt.
The literacy
rate is about
57% of the adult
population.
Education is
free through
university and
compulsory from
ages six through
15. Rates for
primary and
secondary
education have
strengthened in
recent years.
Ninety-three
percent of
children enter
primary school
and about
one-quarter drop
out after the
sixth year; in
1994-95, 87%
entered primary
school and about
half dropped out
after the sixth
year. Major
universities
include Cairo
University
(100,000
students),
Alexandria
University, and
the
1,000-year-old
Al-Azhar
University, one
of the world's
major centers of
Islamic
learning.
Egypt's vast
and rich
literature
constitutes an
important
cultural element
in the life of
the country and
in the Arab
world as a
whole. Egyptian
novelists and
poets were among
the first to
experiment with
modern styles of
Arabic
literature, and
the forms they
developed have
been widely
imitated.
Egyptian
novelist Naguib
Mahfouz was the
first Arab to
win the Nobel
prize for
literature.
Egyptian books
and films are
available
throughout the
Middle East.
Egypt has
endured as a
unified state
for more than
5,000 years, and
archeological
evidence
indicates that a
developed
Egyptian society
has existed for
much longer.
Egyptians take
pride in their "pharaonic
heritage" and in
their descent
from what they
consider
mankind's
earliest
civilization.
The Arabic word
for Egypt is
Misr, which
originally
connoted
"civilization"
or "metropolis."
Archeological
findings show
that primitive
tribes lived
along the Nile
long before the
dynastic history
of the pharaohs
began. By 6000
B.C., organized
agriculture had
appeared.
In about 3100
B.C., Egypt was
united under a
ruler known as
Mena, or Menes,
who inaugurated
the 30 pharaonic
dynasties into
which Egypt's
ancient history
is divided--the
Old and the
Middle Kingdoms
and the New
Empire. The
pyramids at Giza
(near Cairo),
which were built
in the fourth
dynasty, testify
to the power of
the pharaonic
religion and
state. The Great
Pyramid, the
tomb of Pharaoh
Khufu (also
known as Cheops),
is the only
surviving
monument of the
Seven Wonders of
the Ancient
World. Ancient
Egypt reached
the peak of its
power, wealth,
and territorial
extent in the
period called
the New Empire
(1567-1085
B.C.).
Persian,
Greek, Roman,
and Arab
Conquerors
In 525 B.,
Cambyses, the
son of Cyrus the
Great, led a
Persian invasion
force that
dethroned the
last pharaoh of
the 26th
Dynasty. The
country remained
a Persian
province until
conquered by
Alexander the
Great in 322 BC,
ushering in
Ptolemeic rule
Egypt that
lasted for
nearly 300
years.
Following a
brief Persian
reconquest,
Egypt was
invaded and
conquered by
Arab forces in
642. A process
of Arabization
and Islamization
ensued. Although
a Coptic
Christian
minority
remained--and
remains today,
constituting
about 10% of the
population--the
Arab language
inexorably
supplanted the
indigenous
Coptic tongue.
For the next
1,300 years, a
succession of
Arab, Mameluke,
and Ottoman
caliphs, beys,
and sultans
ruled the
country.
European
Influence
The Ottoman
Turks controlled
Egypt from 1517
until 1882,
except for a
brief period of
French rule
under Napoleon
Bonaparte. In
1805, Mohammed
Ali, commander
of an Albanian
contingent of
Ottoman troops,
was appointed
Pasha, founding
the dynasty that
ruled Egypt
until his
great-great
grandson, Farouk
I, was
overthrown in
1952. Mohammed
Ali the Great
ruled Egypt
until 1848,
writing the
first chapter in
the modern
history of
Egypt. The
growth of modern
urban Cairo
began in the
reign of Ismail
(1863-79). Eager
to Westernize
the capital, he
ordered the
construction of
a European-style
city to the west
of the medieval
core. The Suez
Canal was
completed in his
reign in 1869,
and its
completion was
celebrated by
many events,
including the
commissioning of
Verdi's "Aida"
for the new
opera house and
the building of
great palaces
such as the Omar
Khayyam
(originally
constructed to
entertain the
French Empress
Eugenie, which
is now the
central section
of the Cairo
Marriott Hotel).
In 1882,
British
expeditionary
forces crushed a
revolt against
the Ottoman
rulers, marking
the beginning of
British
occupation and
the virtual
inclusion of
Egypt within the
British Empire.
In deference to
growing
nationalism, the
U.K.
unilaterally
declared
Egyptian
independence in
1922. British
influence,
however,
continued to
dominate Egypt's
political life
and fostered
fiscal,
administrative,
and governmental
reforms.
In the
pre-1952
revolution
period, three
political forces
competed with
one another: the
Wafd, a broadly
based
nationalist
political
organization
strongly opposed
to British
influence; King
Fuad, whom the
British had
installed during
World War II;
and the British
themselves, who
were determined
to maintain
control over the
Canal. Other
political forces
emerging in this
period included
the communist
party (1925) and
the Muslim
Brotherhood
(1928), which
eventually
became a potent
political and
religious force.
During World
War II, British
troops used
Egypt as a base
for Allied
operations
throughout the
region. British
troops were
withdrawn to the
Suez Canal area
in 1947, but
nationalist,
anti-British
feelings
continued to
grow after the
war. On July
22-23, 1952, a
group of
disaffected army
officers (the
"free officers")
led by Lt. Col.
Gamal Abdel
Nasser overthrew
King Farouk,
whom the
military blamed
for Egypt's poor
performance in
the 1948 war
with Israel.
Following a
brief experiment
with civilian
rule, they
abrogated the
1923
constitution and
declared Egypt a
republic on June
19, 1953. Nasser
evolved into a
charismatic
leader, not only
of Egypt, but
the Arab world,
promoting and
implementing
"Arab
socialism." He
nationalized
Egypt’s economy.
Nasser helped
establish the
Non-aligned
Movement of
developing
countries in
September 1961,
and continued to
be a leading
force in the
movement until
his death in
1970. When the
United States
held up military
sales in
reaction to
Egyptian
neutrality
vis-à-vis
Moscow, Nasser
concluded an
arms deal with
Czechoslovakia
in September
1955.
When the U.S.
and the World
Bank withdrew
their offer to
help finance the
Aswan High Dam
in mid-1956,
Nasser
nationalized the
privately owned
Suez Canal
Company. The
crisis that
followed,
exacerbated by
growing tensions
with Israel over
guerrilla
attacks from
Gaza and Israeli
reprisals,
resulted in the
invasion of
Egypt that
October by
France, Britain,
and Israel.
Nasser's
domestic
policies were
arbitrary and
frequently
oppressive, yet
generally
popular. All
opposition was
stamped out, and
opponents of the
regime
frequently were
imprisoned
without trial.
Nasser's foreign
and military
policies helped
provoke the
Israeli attack
of June 1967
that virtually
destroyed
Egypt's armed
forces along
with those of
Jordan and
Syria. Israel
also occupied
the Sinai
Peninsula, the
Gaza Strip, the
West Bank, and
the Golan
Heights. Nasser,
nonetheless, was
revered by the
masses in Egypt
and elsewhere in
the Arab world
until his death
in 1970.
After
Nasser's death,
another of the
original "free
officers," Vice
President Anwar
el-Sadat, was
elected
President. In
1971, Sadat
concluded a
treaty of
friendship with
the Soviet
Union, but a
year later,
ordered Soviet
advisers to
leave. In 1973,
he launched the
October war with
Israel, in which
Egypt's armed
forces achieved
initial
successes but
were defeated in
Israeli
counterattacks.
Camp David
and the Peace
Process
In a momentous
change from the
Nasser era,
President Sadat
shifted Egypt
from a policy of
confrontation
with Israel to
one of peaceful
accommodation
through
negotiations.
Following the
Sinai
Disengagement
Agreements of
1974 and 1975,
Sadat created a
fresh opening
for progress by
his dramatic
visit to
Jerusalem in
November 1977.
This led to
President Jimmy
Carter's
invitation to
President Sadat
and Prime
Minister Begin
to join him in
trilateral
negotiations at
Camp David.
The outcome
was the historic
Camp David
accords, signed
by Egypt and
Israel and
witnessed by the
U.S. on
September 17,
1978. The
accords led to
the March 26,
1979, signing of
the Egypt-Israel
peace treaty, by
which Egypt
regained control
of the Sinai in
May 1982.
Throughout this
period,
U.S.-Egyptian
relations
steadily
improved, but
Sadat's
willingness to
break ranks by
making peace
with Israel
earned him the
enmity of most
other Arab
states.
Domestic
Change
Sadat introduced
greater
political
freedom and a
new economic
policy, the most
important aspect
of which was the
infitah or "open
door." This
relaxed
government
controls over
the economy and
encouraged
private,
including
foreign,
investment.
Sadat dismantled
much of the
existing
political
machine and
brought to trial
a number of
former
government
officials
accused of
criminal
excesses during
the Nasser era.
Liberalization
also included
the
reinstitution of
due process and
the legal
banning of
torture. Sadat
tried to expand
participation in
the political
process in the
mid-1970s but
later abandoned
this effort. In
the last years
of his life,
Egypt was racked
by violence
arising from
discontent with
Sadat's rule and
sectarian
tensions, and it
experienced a
renewed measure
of repression.
From Sadat
to Mubarak
On October 6,
1981, Islamic
extremists
assassinated
President Sadat.
Hosni Mubarak,
Vice President
since 1975 and
air force
commander during
the October 1973
war, was elected
President later
that month. He
was subsequently
confirmed by
popular
referendum for
four more 6-year
terms, most
recently in
September 2005.
Mubarak has
maintained
Egypt's
commitment to
the Camp David
peace process,
while at the
same time
re-establishing
Egypt's position
as an Arab
leader. Egypt
was readmitted
to the Arab
League in 1989.
Egypt also has
played a
moderating role
in such
international
fora as the UN
and the
Non-Aligned
Movement.
Since 1991,
Mubarak has
overseen a
domestic
economic reform
program to
reduce the size
of the public
sector and
expand the role
of the private
sector. There
has been less
progress in
political
reform. The
November 2000
People's
Assembly
elections saw 34
members of the
opposition win
seats in the
454-seat
assembly, facing
a clear majority
of 388
ultimately
affiliated with
the ruling
National
Democratic Party
(NDP).
Opposition
parties continue
to face various
difficulties in
mounting
credible
electoral
challenges to
the NDP. The
Muslim
Brotherhood,
founded in Egypt
in 1928, remains
an illegal
organization and
is not
recognized as a
political party
(current
Egyptian law
prohibits the
formation of
political
parties based on
religion).
Members are
known publicly
and openly speak
their views,
although they do
not explicitly
identify
themselves as
members of the
organization.
Members of the
Brotherhood have
been elected to
the People's
Assembly and
local councils
as independents.
GOVERNMENT
AND POLITICAL
CONDITIONS
The Egyptian
Constitution
provides for a
strong
executive.
Authority is
vested in an
elected
president who
can appoint one
or more vice
presidents, a
prime minister,
and a cabinet.
The president's
term runs for 6
years. Egypt's
legislative
body, the
People's
Assembly, has
454 members--444
popularly
elected and 10
appointed by the
president. The
constitution
reserves 50% of
the assembly
seats for
"workers and
peasants." The
assembly sits
for a 5-year
term but can be
dissolved
earlier by the
President. There
also is a
264-member Shura
(consultative)
Council, in
which 88 members
are appointed
and 174 elected
for 6-year
terms. Below the
national level,
authority is
exercised by and
through
governors and
mayors appointed
by the central
government and
by popularly
elected local
councils.
Opposition
party
organizations
make their views
public and
represent their
followers at
various levels
in the political
system, but
power is
concentrated in
the hands of the
President and
the National
Democratic Party
majority in the
People's
Assembly and
those
institutions
dominate the
political
system. In
addition to the
ruling National
Democratic
Party, there are
18 other legally
recognized
parties, whereas
in 2004 there
were only 16
other legally
recognized
parties.
The November
2000 elections
were generally
considered to
have been more
transparent and
better executed
than past
elections,
because of
universal
judicial
monitoring of
polling
stations. On the
other hand,
opposition
parties continue
to lodge
credible
complaints about
electoral
manipulation by
the government.
There are
significant
restrictions on
the political
process and
freedom of
expression for
non-governmental
organizations,
including
professional
syndicates and
organizations
promoting
respect for
human rights.
Progress was
seen in the
September 2005
presidential
elections when
parties were
allowed to field
candidates
against
President
Mubarak and his
National
Democratic
Party. In early
2005, President
Mubarak proposed
amending the
constitution to
allow, for the
first time in
Egypt's history,
competitive,
multi-candidate
elections. An
amendment was
drafted by
parliament and
approved by
public
referendum in
late May 2005.
In September
2005, President
Mubarak was
reelected,
according to
official
results, with
88% of the vote.
His two
principal
challengers,
Ayman Nour and
No'man Gom'a,
took 7% and 3%
of the vote
respectively. A
new People's
Assembly will be
elected for a
5-year term in
three stages in
November and
December 2005.
Egypt's
judicial system
is based on
European
(primarily
French) legal
concepts and
methods. Under
the Mubarak
government, the
courts have
demonstrated
increasing
independence,
and the
principles of
due process and
judicial review
have gained
greater respect.
The legal code
is derived
largely from the
Napoleonic Code.
Marriage and
personal status
(family law) are
primarily based
on the religious
law of the
individual
concerned, which
for most
Egyptians is
Islamic Law (Sharia).