Egypt’s Health Minister Khaled Abdel Ghaffar reiterated on Tuesday abiding by the schedule set to move the employees of the Ministry of Health to its new premises in the governmental district in the New Administrative Capital (NAC).
During the minister’s weekly meeting with the top officials and heads of basic sectors at the ministry via videoconference, Abdel Ghaffar said the ministry will start its work in its new premises officially next month at the directives of the political leadership.
Moving to the new capital will be implemented gradually as of May 2023, Spokesman for the Health Ministry Hossam Abdel Ghaffar said in a statement.
Late in March, Egypt’s Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly affirmed the need for completing the gradual relocation of ministries to the New Administrative Capital.
A number of ministries already moved in full to the government district in the New Administrative Capital, Madbouly stressed during the weekly Cabinet meeting in the new capital.
He added that the procedures of ministries’ relocation to the new capital will be periodically checked.
Ministry of Social Solidarity announced in mid-March relocating to the New Administrative Capital. Also, Minister of Education Reda Hegazi announced in March that he started carrying out his work in the new capital.
Earlier in March, Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi discussed the government’s plan to relocate ministries and various State agencies and institutions to NAC in a meeting with Madbouly and the Cabinet members at the Strategic Leadership Center in the new capital.
During the meeting, Sisi ordered intensifying efforts to ensure that the government’s transition to the New Administrative Capital represents a real development for the state’s administrative apparatus in a comprehensive and qualitative manner, the Egyptian Presidency said in a statement.
This would be achieved not only through the modernization of buildings and premises, but also through the qualification of workers and the provision of training programs to government personnel to teach them modern scientific methods of administration, Sisi affirmed.
These efforts would contribute to the establishment of an efficient and effective administrative body and to the shift toward a smart government and the beginning of a new era of providing outstanding digitized services to citizens.
Sisi affirmed that marching toward the “New Republic” requires the efforts, action and sacrifice of all loyal Egyptians to formulate a better present and future for the country.
Sisi has issued directives for the ministries to relocate their headquarters to the new capital over the past years. However, the move was delayed for years due to the coronavirus pandemic and the global repercussions.
The New Administrative Capital, under construction since 2015, is located east of Cairo and is set to house millions of people when completed.
In more than one occasion, Sisi affirmed that the new capital will embody the values of modern Egypt and is set to receive more than 50,000 public employees working in the ministries and other state bodies.