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Why is Egypt Spending Millions on a New Space Agency?

The Egyptian pyramids at Giza, on the outskirts of Cairo are seen from above in an image taken by European Space Agency astronaut Tim Peake from the International Space Station on April 19, 2016.
Egypt Space Agency

Updated | On a dusty construction site in the desert on the outskirts of Cairo, a blue glass building glints in the sunlight. The shiny new complex is home to the new Egyptian Space Agency, a reboot of an abandoned 1960s program that the country’s cash-poor government says will produce satellites to drive innovation and discover resources, which it hopes are hiding under Egypt’s vast deserts.

After sweeping to power in a popular military coup almost four years ago, is now struggling to prove he can save a sputtering economy that has led to long lines at gas stations and inflated food prices and prompted one desperate citizen to set himself on fire. The space program is el-Sissi’s latest attempt to reinvigorate the Egyptian economy with a series of mega-projects—from a new administrative capital city outside Cairo to a second Suez Canal. But while investing in infrastructure can create jobs

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