Qandil Cabinet

The Cabinet of the Egyptian Prime Minister Hescham Kandil was presented on August 2, 2012. Kandil was appointed by President Mohammed Mursi, after the resignation of the military council appointed by the prime minister Kamal Ganzuri and his cabinet. In the wake of the military coup of 3 July 2013, the Cabinet Kandil could no longer continue his work regularly. On July 9 Hescham Kandils successor Hazem al - Beblawi has been appointed as Prime Minister. In the following days, a follow- Cabinet has been compiled, which was sworn in on 16 July 2013, and thus has the Cabinet Kandil replaced fact.

The Cabinet Kandil consisted of 35 ministries. The composition of the government comprised mainly technocrats, including members of the Freedom and Justice Party ( Muslim Brotherhood ), the moderate al - Wasat Party, the Party and the Salafist civilization el- Nahda party.

On January 5, 2013 there was a reshuffle in the ten ministerial posts have been filled. The swearing in of the new government members took place on January 6. The reshuffle was underway after the Transport Minister Mohamed Rashad al - Matini on 17 November 2012 the Minister for Communications and Information Technology Hani Mahmoud on December 25, 2012 and the Minister of Parliamentary Affairs Mohamed Mahsub are on December 27, 2012 resigned respectively. The reshuffle was associated with the fact that the Mursi government braced himself for the coming phase in which negotiations with the International Monetary Fund and economic reforms queuing.

A cabinet reshuffle was carried out for 7 May 2013 again, in the nine ministers were replaced. This step was necessary, inter alia by the resignation of Justice Minister Ahmed Mekki on April 21, who refused the judiciary to " clean up", a claim which was offered to him on the part of the Muslim Brotherhood and while the latter sought to underline his rejection. But not only the Minister of Justice should be immediately replaced. Obviously caused some dissatisfaction about the intermediate state of negotiations with the International Monetary Fund President and Prime Minister Mursi Kandil to replace the Minister of Planning and International Cooperation and the Minister of Finance. Even the minister, who was most recently in charge of investment has not kept his office. On the very day of reshuffle the new ministers have been sworn.

Government members

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