Second Ganzouri Cabinet | |
---|---|
Date formed | 7 December 2011 |
Date dissolved | 26 June 2012 |
People and organisations | |
Head of state | Muhammad Tantawi |
Head of government | Kamal Ganzouri |
Total no. of members | 28 |
History | |
Predecessor | Sharaf Cabinet |
Successor | Qandil Cabinet |
The Second Ganzouri Cabinet was led by Egyptian prime minister Kamal Ganzouri from 7 December 2011 to 26 June 2012. 28 ministers were sworn into Ganzouri's cabinet. [1] The Cabinet headquarters in Cairo were the site of protests in mid-December 2011. [2]
Ministry | Minister | Start of office | Appointed by |
---|---|---|---|
Prime Minister | Kamal el-Ganzuri | 7 December 2011 | Army |
Minister of Agriculture | Saad Nasar | 7 December 2011 | Army |
Minister of Military Production | Ali Ibrahim Sabry | 21 July 2011 | Army |
Minister of Foreign Affairs | Mohamed Kamel Amr | 18 July 2011 | Army |
Minister of Interior | Mohamed Ibrahim | 7 December 2011 | Army |
Minister of Information | Ahmed Anis | 7 December 2011 | Army |
Minister of Higher Education | Hassan Mustafa Khaled | 7 December 2011 | Army |
Minister of Scientific Research | Nadia Zakhary | 7 December 2011 | Army |
Minister of Justice | Adel Abdel Hamid | 7 December 2011 | Army |
Minister of Culture | Shaker Abdel Hamid | 7 December 2011 | Army |
Minister of Tourism | Mounir Fakhry Abdel Nour | February 2011 | Army |
Minister of Housing and New Urban Communities | Mohamed Fathi ElBaradei | 31 January 2011 | Hosni Mubarak |
Minister of Health | Foad ElNawawy | 7 December 2011 | Army |
Minister of Water and Irrigation | Hisham Kandeel | 21 July 2011 | Army |
Minister of Environment | Mostafa Hussein Kamel | 7 December 2011 | Army |
Minister of Education | Gamal El-Araby | 7 December 2011 | Army |
Minister of Industry and Foreign Trade | Mahmoud Eissa | 21 July 2011 | Army |
Minister of Finance | Momtaz Said | 7 December 2011 | Army |
Minister of Electricity | Hassan Younes | 22 November 2001 | Hosni Mubarak |
Minister of Petroleum and Mineral Resources | Mohamed Abdullah Ghorab | 21 March 2011 | Army |
Minister of International Cooperation | Faiza Abu Naga | 13 July 2004 | Hosni Mubarak |
Minister of Social Affairs and Insurance | Nagwa Hassan Khalil | 7 December 2011 | Army |
Minister of Traffic, Communication and Civil Aviation | Hassan Massoud | 7 December 2011 | Army |
Minister of Food Supply and International Commerce | Gouda Abdel Khalek | ||
Minister of Investment and Businesses Sector | Ashraf El-Sharqawy | 7 December 2011 | Army |
Minister of Labor Force | Fathi Fekri | 7 December 2011 | Army |
Minister of Antiquities | Mohamed Ibrahim Ali Sayed | 7 December 2011 | Army |
Minister of Religious Endowments | Mohamed El-Quosy | 7 December 2011 | Army |
Atef Muhammad Ebeid was an Egyptian politician who served in various capacities in the governments of Egypt. He was Prime Minister of Egypt from 1999 to 2004.
Kamal Ganzouri was an Egyptian economist who served as the Prime Minister of Egypt from 7 December 2011 to 24 July 2012. He previously served as prime minister from 1996 to 1999. He came to power in 1996 succeeding Atef Sedki, and was in turn succeeded by Atef Ebeid in 1999. He was branded Minister of the Poor and the Opposition Minister because of his way of dealing with limited income people and the opposition. Before becoming prime minister, Ganzouri served as Minister of Planning and International Cooperation. On 24 November 2011, Egypt's military rulers appointed him prime minister. He was sworn in and took office on 7 December 2011.
Mounir Fakhry Abdel Nour is an Egyptian businessman and politician.
The Cabinet of Egypt is the chief executive body of the Arab Republic of Egypt. It consists of the Prime Minister and the cabinet ministers.
The Egyptian Social Democratic Party is a social liberal and a social democratic party in Egypt. It was founded after the 2011 Egyptian Revolution by the merger of two minor liberal parties, the Liberal Egyptian Party, and the Egyptian Democratic Party on 29 March 2011.
Hesham Mohamed Qandil is an Egyptian engineer and civil servant who was Prime Minister of Egypt from 2012 to 2013. Qandil was appointed as Prime Minister by President Mohamed Morsi on 24 July 2012 and sworn in on 2 August 2012. Qandil previously served as Minister of Water Resources and Irrigation from 2011 to 2012.
Ahmed Mekki was the Minister of Justice of Egypt from 2 August 2012 until he submitted his resignation to President Morsi on 20 April 2013. He was a member of the Qandil Cabinet. Mekki was one of the independent ministers in the cabinet. He is the brother of the former vice president Mahmoud Mekki, who resigned from office on 22 December 2012.
Osama Saleh is an Egyptian economist, who served as the minister of investment of Egypt from 2 August 2012 to 7 May 2013. He was part of the Qandil Cabinet. He stayed as investment minister in the 2013 interim government.
The cabinet of Egyptian Prime Minister Hesham Qandil was sworn in on 2 August 2012. Qandil was appointed by President Mohamed Morsi, following the resignation of military-named premier Kamal Ganzouri. The cabinet consists of 36 ministers. The composition of the government is mostly formed by technocrats, with five Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) members and one member each from the Al-Wasat and Renaissance parties.
Momtaz El-Saeed is an Egyptian civil servant who once served in the government of Egypt as minister of finance from 2011 to 2013.
Nagwa Hussein Khalil was the Egyptian minister of social affairs and insurance. She was sworn into prime minister Hesham Qandil's cabinet on 2 August 2012, following the Egyptian revolution that deposed president Hosni Mubarak. She was one of the independent ministers in the cabinet, as well as only one of two women in the cabinet.
Mostafa Hussein Kamel Ahmed Mostafa is the former Egyptian Minister of State for Environmental Affairs. He was sworn into Prime Minister Hesham Qandil's cabinet, the Qandil Cabinet, on 2 August 2012, following the 2011–2012 Egyptian revolution that deposed President Hosni Mubarak, retaining his position from former Prime Minister Kamal Ganzouri's interim government. He was one of the independent ministers in the cabinet.
Mohamed Arab is a veteran politician, who has served as Egypt's former minister of culture in different cabinets, including the Beblawi cabinet.
Talaat Afifi is an Egyptian professor at Al Azhar University. He served as Egypt's minister of religious endowments (Awqaf) from August 2012 to July 2013 and was part of the Qandil Cabinet.
Hassan Younes is an Egyptian engineer and politician, who is the former long-term minister of electricity and energy. He was in office during the Mobarak era and also, in two interim governments of post-Mobarak era.
Hazem El Beblawi is an Egyptian economist and politician who was interim prime minister of Egypt from 2013 until 1 March 2014. Previously he served as deputy prime minister and minister of finance in 2011. After the ouster of President Mohammed Morsi and his government in July 2013, Beblawi was named interim prime minister. On 24 February 2014, Beblawi announced his resignation.
Adel Abdel-Hamid was the Minister of Justice of Egypt in the interim government of Hazem Al Beblawi. He was appointed and took oath of office before acting President Adly Mansour on 21 July 2013.
Mahmoud Mohamed Mahmoud Abo El-Nasr is an Egyptian engineering professor and politician. He was the minister of education in the interim government of Hazem Al Beblawi and held the position in the interim government of Ibrahim Mahlab.
Ahmed Douma is an Egyptian activist and blogger, who has been arrested under each consecutive Egyptian government in recent years. He is a member of the Egyptian Popular Current. Having been in prison since 2013, he was released on 19 August 2023 following a presidential pardon.
Mostafa Kamal Madbouly is the Prime Minister of Egypt, serving since 2018. He was appointed by President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi to succeed Sherif Ismail following his government's resignation in the wake of Sisi's re-election. Madbouly also served in Sherif Ismail's cabinet as Minister of Housing, and had also briefly served as acting prime minister.