Tourism minister resigns over new Luxor governor

Tourism minister resigns over new Luxor governor
Updated 20 June 2013
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Tourism minister resigns over new Luxor governor

Tourism minister resigns over new Luxor governor

CAIRO: Egypt’s tourism minister resigned in protest yesterday after President Muhammad Mursi appointed a new governor for Luxor from a party linked to a massacre of holiday makers in the temple city.
Hesham Zazou said he “cannot continue in the role of tourism minister” a day after the appointment of Adel Al-Khayat, a member of the political arm of Gamaa Islamiya, and other governors triggered unrest in several provinces.
Gamaa Islamiya claimed responsibility for an attack on a major tourist attraction in the southern city of Luxor that killed 58 foreign tourists in 1997.
Prime Minister Hesham Qandil refused to accept Zazou’s resignation and asked him to remain in his post until the situation is reviewed, ministry spokeswoman Rasha Al-Azaizy told the official MENA news agency.
But she said Zazou insisted he would cease to work “as long as the new governor remains in his post, greatly harming tourism in Egypt generally and in Luxor specifically.”
President Mursi named Khayat along with 16 other new governors on Sunday, including seven from his Muslim Brotherhood movement.
Apart from its symbolic implications, Khayat’s appointment deals a blow to the once-lucrative tourism industry struggling to recover after the 2011 uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak.
Khayat belongs to the Construction and Development party, the political arm of Gamaa Islamiya which was blamed for a spate of attacks in the 1990s before it renounced violence.
In statements to the media, he said his first priority as governor would be to “ensure the return of tourists” to Luxor.
But a coalition of opposition groups, trade unions and tourism workers has threatened to close down all Pharaonic temples and tourist attractions should Khayat remain in the post. The groups called for the cancelation of the appointment “of a governor with a religious background in a tourist city” otherwise “all historic areas and pharaonic sites will be closed down.” On Tuesday, clashes erupted in several cities of the Nile Delta following protests against the appointments, leaving 26 people injured.