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Subdivisions of Egypt

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(Redirected from Markazes of Egypt)

Egypt is divided, for the purpose of public administration, according to a three-layer hierarchy and some districts are further subdivided, creating an occasional fourth layer. It has a centralized system of local government officially called local administration as it is a branch of the Executive.[1]

The top-level of the hierarchy are 27 governorates (singular: محافظة muḥāfẓa, plural: محافظات muḥāfẓat).[2] A governorate is administered by a governor, who is appointed by the President of Egypt and serves at the president's discretion. Governors have the civilian rank of minister and report directly to the prime minister, who chairs the Board of Governors (maglis al-muhafzin) and meets with them on a regular basis.[3][4] The Minister of Local Development coordinates the governors and their governorate's budgets.[5]

The second-level, beneath and within governorates, are marakiz (singular: مركز markaz, plural: مراكز marakiz) or aqsam (singular: قسم qism, plural: أقسام aqsam). The third-level is composed of districts (singular: حي ḥay, plural: أحياء aḥya') and villages (singular: قرية qarya, plural: قرى qura). There is a governing structure at each of these levels.[6][7] Districts may be further divided into sub-districts as a fourth level.

There are also seven economic regions used for planning purposes, defined by the General Organization for Physical Planning (GOPP).

Overview

[edit]

Egypt generally has three tiers of local administration units as per Article 1 of the Local Administration Law where each unit has an appointed head,[1] and one economic level that does not have any administrative duties:[8]

0. Economic regions (non administrative, comprising governorates)

  1. Governorates, in some cases city-governorates where the governor is also the head of the city.
  2. Markaz (county, pl. marakiz) and city (as capital) where head of markaz is head of the city, or independent city (madina, usually large cities e.g. Giza, Shubra al-Kheima).
  3. Districts (ahyaa, singl. hayy, subdivisions of cities) and main villages (subdivisions of marakiz).
  • For policing and census purposes districts are covered by a qism (police ward), or more.
  • Shiakha (census block, urban), are non-administrative subdivisions of districts/qisms. While main villages may have smaller affiliated villages/hamlets (qarya tabi'a, izba, nag'a).

In addition to these tiers are New Urban Communities, which are satellite cities that are built and operated by the national level New Urban Communities Authority (NUCA). Its chairman, the Minister of Housing, Utilities and Urban Communities issues planning permits and oversees the communities, while the appointed city agency heads issue building permits and run the day-to-day affairs of functioning towns.[9] These 'cities' are represented in the local administration hierarchy as qisms affiliated to the nearest city proper (See for example Badr, Shorouk and New Cairo). While NUCA is legally obliged to transfer these communities to mainstream local administration once they are developed, none have been since its inception in 1979.[9] The other exception are new villages built by the Ministry of Agriculture's General Authority for Rehabilitation Projects and Agricultural Development (GARPAD) in its desert land reclamation schemes, which are initially under its jurisdiction and should eventually be transferred to local authorities.[10]

At the highest tier, there are three city-state governorates, Cairo, Port Said, and Suez, where the governor is also head of the city and lower units are 100% urban. Alexandria is a quasi -city-state also with a merged city-governorate unit, though with one rural county (markaz). The other 23 governorates are formed of counties (marakiz, sing. markaz) composed of one city acting as the local administrative capital, overseeing other smaller cities (actually towns) as well as rural units (al-wihdat al-rifiyah) that are villages.[11] The county-city heads (raies markaz wa madina) are appointed by the governor, where one county-city serves as the governorate capital and seat of the governor.

Two new governorates were created in April 2008: Helwan and 6th of October.[12] In April 2011, however, the 6th of October and Helwan governorates were again incorporated into the Giza and Cairo Governorates, respectively.[13] Luxor was created in December 2009, to be the 29th governorate of Egypt, but with the abolition of the 6th of October and Helwan governorates, the number of governorates has decreased to 27.[14]

History

[edit]

Before the 1952 Egyptian revolution, state penetration of the rural areas was limited by the power of local notables. Under Nasser, land reform reduced those notables' socioeconomic dominance, and the peasants were incorporated into cooperatives which transferred mass dependence from landlords to the government. The extension of officials into the countryside permitted the regime to bring development and services to the village. The local branches of the ruling party, the Arab Socialist Union (ASU), fostered a certain peasant political activism and coopted the local notables — in particular the village headmen — and checked their independence from the regime.[15]

State penetration did not retreat under Sadat and Mubarak. The earlier effort to mobilize peasants and deliver services disappeared as the local party and cooperative withered, but administrative controls over the peasants remained intact. The local power of the old families and the headmen revived but more at the expense of peasants than of the state. The district police station balanced the notables, and the system of local government (the mayor and council) integrated them into the regime.[15]

Until 1979, local government enjoyed limited power in Egypt's highly centralized state. Under the central government, there were twenty-six governorates (27 today), which were subdivided into counties (In Arabic: مركز markaz  "center", plural: مراكز marākiz), each of which was further subdivided into towns or villages.[15] At each level, there was a governing structure that combined representative councils and government-appointed executive organs headed by governors, district officers, and mayors, respectively. Governors were appointed by the president, and they, in turn, appointed subordinate executive officers. The coercive backbone of the state apparatus ran downward from the Ministry of Interior through the governors' executive organs to the district police station and the village headman.[15]

Sadat took several measures to administratively decentralize power to the provinces and towns, with limited fiscal and almost no political decentralisation. Governors acquired more authority under Law 43/1979,[1] which reduced the administrative and budgetary controls of the central government over the provinces. The elected councils acquired, at least formally, the right to approve or disapprove the local budget. In an effort to reduce local demands on the central treasury, local government was given wider powers to raise local taxes. Local representative councils became vehicles of pressure for government spending, and the soaring deficits of local government bodies had to be covered by the central government. Local government was encouraged to enter into joint ventures with private investors, and these ventures stimulated an alliance between government officials and the local rich that paralleled the infitah alliance at the national level.

Under president Hosni Mubarak's rule (1981-2011), some scholars believed decentralization and local autonomy was achieved, and local policies often reflected special local conditions. Thus, officials in Upper Egypt often bowed to the powerful Islamic movement there, while those in the port cities struck alliances with importers."[15] However, others found local governance proved impotent, with parliamentarians reduced to the roles of local councillors, lobbying at the parliamentary level for basic local services, while the elected Local Popular Councils (LPC) had a parallel ceremonial role to the appointed Local Executive Councils (LEC) that managed the local departments.[16] Elections of the LPCs have also been observed to be fraudulent where the ruling National Democratic Party NDP won 95 percent of local council seats during the last election in 2008, and 84 percent of the seats were walkovers.[17]

After Mubarak was deposed by the popular uprising of January 2011, parliament and local councils were dissolved pending the writing of a new constitution. The short-lived 2012 constitution and the current 2014 version gave wider local power through more decentralization.[4] However, till the end of 2022, it has not been implemented as the government has drawn out the process of drafting a new local administration law leaving LPC seats vacant for over a decade.[18][17]

Governorates

[edit]

Egypt is divided into 27 governorates (muhāfazāt) and each has a capital and at least one city.[19] Each governorate is administered by a governor, who is appointed by the President of Egypt and serves at the president's discretion. Most governorates have a population density of more than one thousand per km2, while the three largest have a population density of less than two per km2.[20] The governorates of Egypt are:

Egyptian governorates[21][22]
Name Area Population
(November 2023 estimate)
Density
(November 2023)
Capital
km2 sq mi per km2 per sq mi
Alexandria 2,300 890 5,703,824 2,480 6,400 Alexandria
Aswan 62,726 24,219 1,698,201 27 70 Aswan
Asyut 25,926 10,010 5,071,485 196 510 Asyut
Beheira 9,826 3,794 6,940,234 706 1,830 Damanhur
Beni Suef 10,954 4,229 3,618,395 330 850 Beni Suef
Cairo 3,085 1,191 10,456,284 3,389 8,780 Cairo
Dakahlia 3,538 1,366 7,058,212 1,995 5,170 Mansoura
Damietta 910 350 2,023,380 2,223 5,760 Damietta
Faiyum 6,068 2,343 4,141,222 682 1,770 Faiyum
Gharbia 1,942 750 5,483,000 2,823 7,310 Tanta
Giza 13,184 5,090 9,534,283 723 1,870 Giza
Ismailia 5,067 1,956 1,482,999 293 760 Ismailia
Kafr El Sheikh 3,467 1,339 3,731,540 1,076 2,790 Kafr El Sheikh
Luxor 460 180 1,429,385 3,107 8,050 Luxor
Matrouh 166,563 64,310 580,304 3 7.8 Marsa Matruh
Minya 32,279 12,463 6,332,918 196 510 Minya
Monufia 2,499 965 4,743,341 1,898 4,920 Shibin El Kom
New Valley 440,098 169,923 324,600 0.7 1.8 Kharga
North Sinai 28,992 11,194 544,494 19 49 Arish
Port Said[23] 1,345 519 835,193 621 1,610 Port Said
Qalyubia 1,124 434 6,137,896 5,461 14,140 Banha
Qena 10,798 4,169 3,651,215 338 880 Qena
Red Sea 119,099 45,984 409,394 3 7.8 Hurghada
Sharqia 4,911 1,896 8,032,683 1,636 4,240 Zagazig
Sohag 11,022 4,256 5,714,903 518 1,340 Sohag
South Sinai 31,272 12,074 145,934 5 13 El Tor
Suez 9,002 3,476 843,385 94 240 Suez
Total 1,010,407 390,120 106,668,704 106 270 Cairo

Municipal divisions

[edit]
Map of Egypt's municipal divisions.
Map of administrative divisions (Markaz) of Egypt

At the municipal-level are markaz, kism, police-administered areas, and new cities. Generally, rural areas are divided into markaz whereas urban areas are divided into kism. As of 2013, there were 351 subdivisions, of which 177 were kism, 162 markaz, 9 new cities, and 3 police-administered areas. There are also unorganized areas in the Alexandria, Aswan, Asyut, Beheira, Beni Suef, Cairo, Dakahlia, Damietta, Faiyum, Giza, Ismailia, Kafr El Sheikh, Luxor, Minya, Port Said, Qalyubia, Qena, Sharqia, Sohag, and Suez governorates.[24][25]

  • k - kism
  • m - markaz
  • n - new city
  • p - police-administered
  • 6 October 1 (k)
  • 6 October 2 (k)
  • 10th of Ramadan 1 (k)
  • 10th of Ramadan 2 (k)
  • 15 May (k)
  • Abdeen (k)
  • Abnub (m)
  • Abu El Matamir (m)
  • Abu Hammad (m)
  • Abu Hummus (m)
  • Abu Kebir (m)
  • Abu Qirqas (m)
  • Abu Radis (k)
  • Abu Simbel (m)
  • Abu Tig (m)
  • Abu Tisht (m)
  • Abu Zenima (k)
  • Aga (m)
  • Agouza (k)
  • Ain Shams (k)
  • Akhmim (m)
  • Alexandria Port Police Dept. (p)
  • Amreya (k)
  • Arish 1 (k)
  • Arish 2 (k)
  • Arish 3 (k)
  • Arish 4 (k)
  • Armant (m)
  • Ashmoun (m)
  • Aswan (k)
  • Aswan (m)
  • Asyut (m)
  • Asyut 1 (k)
  • Asyut 2 (k)
  • Ataka (k)
  • Atfih (m)
  • Awlad Saqr (m)
  • Awsim (m)
  • Azbakeya (k)
  • Bab El Sharia (k)
  • Bab Sharq (k)
  • Badr (k)
  • Badr (m)
  • Banha (k)
  • Banha (m)
  • Baris Shurta (m)
  • Basyoun (m)
  • Beni Ebeid (m)
  • Beni Mazar (m)
  • Beni Suef (k)
  • Beni Suef (m)
  • Biba (m)
  • Bilbeis (m)
  • Bilqas (m)
  • Bir El Abd (k)
  • Birket El Sab (m)
  • Biyala (m)
  • Borg El Arab (k)
  • Bulaq (k)
  • Bulaq El Dakrur (k)
  • Burullus (m)
  • Dahab (k)
  • Dairut (m)
  • Damanhur (k)
  • Damanhur (m)
  • Damietta (m)
  • Damietta 1 (k)
  • Damietta 2 (k)
  • Dar El Salam (m)
  • Daraw (m)
  • Deir Mawas (m)
  • Dekernes (m)
  • Dekhela (k)
  • Desouk (k)
  • Desouk (m)
  • Dishna (m)
  • Diyarb Negm (m)
  • Dokki (k)
  • Edfu (m)
  • Edku (m)
  • El Ahram (k)
  • El Arab (k)
  • El Arbein (k)
  • El Atareen (k)
  • El Ayyat (m)
  • El Badari (m)
  • El Badrashein (m)
  • El Bagour (m)
  • El Balyana (m)
  • El Basal Port (k)
  • El Basatin (k)
  • El Dabaa (k)
  • El Darb El Ahmar (k)
  • El Dawahy (k)
  • El Delengat (m)
  • El Fashn (m)
  • El Fath (m)
  • El Gamaliya (k)
  • El Gamaliya (m)
  • El Ganayin (k)
  • El Ghanayem (m)
  • El Gomrok (k)
  • El Hamam (k)
  • El Hamool (m)
  • El Hassana (k)
  • El Hawamdiya (k)
  • El Husseiniya (m)
  • El Ibrahimiya (m)
  • El Idwa (m)
  • El Kawsar (k)
  • El Khalifa (k)
  • El Labban (k)
  • El Mahalla El Kubra (m)
  • El Mahalla El Kubra 1 (k)
  • El Mahalla El Kubra 2 (k)
  • El Mahmoudia (m)
  • El Manakh (k)
  • El Manasra (k)
  • El Mansha (m)
  • El Mansheya (k)
  • El Manzala (m)
  • El Maragha (m)
  • El Marg (k)
  • El Matareya (k)
  • El Matareya (m)
  • El Muski (k)
  • El Nozha (k)
  • El Omraniya (k)
  • El Qanater El Khayreya (m)
  • El Qanayat (k)
  • El Qantara (m)
  • El Qantara El Sharqiya (k)
  • El Qoseir (k)
  • El Qurein (k)
  • El Qusiya (m)
  • El Rahmaniya (m)
  • El Raml 1 (k)
  • El Raml 2 (k)
  • El Reyad (m)
  • El Saff (m)
  • El Salam (k)
  • El Santa (m)
  • El Sayeda Zeinab (k)
  • El Segil (k)
  • El Senbellawein (m)
  • El Sharabiya (k)
  • El Sharq (k)
  • El Shohada (m)
  • El Shorouk (k)
  • El Tebbin (k)
  • El Tor (k)
  • El Usayrat (m)
  • El Wahat El Bahariya (k)
  • El Wahat El Khariga (k)
  • El Waqf (m)
  • El Warraq (k)
  • El Wasta (m)
  • El Weili (k)
  • El Zaher (k)
  • El Zarqa (m)
  • El Zawya El Hamra (k)
  • El Zohur (k)
  • Esna (m)
  • Faisal (k)
  • Faiyum (k)
  • Faiyum (m)
  • Faqous (k)
  • Faqous (m)
  • Faraskur (m)
  • Farshut (m)
  • Fayed (m)
  • Fuwa (m)
  • Gamasa (k)
  • Ganoubi 1 (k)
  • Ganoubi 2 (k)
  • Gharb Nubariya (k)
  • Girga (k)
  • Girga (m)
  • Giza (k)
  • Giza (m)
  • Hada'iq El Qobbah (k)
  • Hala'ib (k)
  • Heliopolis (k)
  • Helwan (k)
  • Hihya (m)
  • Hosh Essa (m)
  • Hurghada (k)
  • Hurghada 2 (k)
  • Ibsheway (m)
  • Ihnasiya (m)
  • Imbaba (k)
  • Imbaba (m)
  • Ismailia (m)
  • Ismailia 1 (k)
  • Ismailia 2 (k)
  • Ismailia 3 (k)
  • Itay El Barud (m)
  • Itsa (m)
  • Juhayna El Gharbiyah (m)
  • Kafr El Dawwar (k)
  • Kafr El Dawwar (m)
  • Kafr El Sheikh (k)
  • Kafr El Sheikh (m)
  • Kafr El Zayat (m)
  • Kafr Saad (m)
  • Kafr Saqr (m)
  • Kafr Shukr (m)
  • Karmoz (k)
  • Kerdasa (m)
  • Khanka (m)
  • Khusus (k)
  • Kom Hamada (m)
  • Kom Ombo (m)
  • Kotoor (m)
  • Luxor (k)
  • Luxor (m)
  • Maadi (k)
  • Maghaghah (m)
  • Mahallat Dimna (m)
  • Mallawi (k)
  • Mallawi (m)
  • Manfalut (m)
  • Mansoura (m)
  • Mansoura 1 (k)
  • Mansoura 2 (k)
  • Marina El Alamein (k)
  • Marsa Alam (k)
  • Mashtool El Souk (m)
  • Matay (m)
  • Menouf (k)
  • Menouf (m)
  • Mersa Matruh (k)
  • Metoubes (m)
  • Minya (k)
  • Minya (m)
  • Minya El Qamh (m)
  • Minyet El Nasr (m)
  • Mit Ghamr (k)
  • Mit Ghamr (m)
  • Mit Salsil (m)
  • Moharam Bek (k)
  • Monshat El Nasr (k)
  • Montaza (k)
  • Mubarak Sharq El Tafrea (k)
  • Nabaroh (m)
  • Nag Hammadi (m)
  • Nakhl (k)
  • Naqada (m)
  • Nasir Bush (m)
  • Nasr (m)
  • Nasr City 1 (k)
  • Nasr City 2 (k)
  • New Akhmim (n)
  • New Aswan (n)
  • New Asyut (n)
  • New Beni Suef (k)
  • New Borg El Arab (n)
  • New Cairo 1 (k)
  • New Cairo 2 (k)
  • New Cairo 3 (k)
  • New Damietta (k)
  • New Faiyum (n)
  • New Minya (n)
  • New Qena (n)
  • New Salhia (k)
  • New Sohag (n)
  • New Toshka (n)
  • North Coast (k)*
  • North Coast (k)
  • Nuweiba (k)
  • Obour (k)
  • Old Cairo (k)
  • Port Fuad (k)
  • Port Fuad 2 (k)
  • Port Said Police Dept. (p)
  • Qaha (k)
  • Qallin (m)
  • Qalyub (k)
  • Qalyub (m)
  • Qasr El Nil (k)
  • Qena (k)
  • Qena (m)
  • Qift (m)
  • Quesna (m)
  • Qus (m)
  • Rafah (k)
  • Ras El Bar (k)
  • Ras Gharib (k)
  • Ras Sidr (k)
  • Rod El Farag (k)
  • Rosetta (m)
  • Sadat City (m)
  • Safaga (k)
  • Sahil Salim (m)
  • Saint Catherine (k)
  • Sallum (k)
  • Samalut (m)
  • Samanoud (m)
  • Saqultah (m)
  • Sers El Lyan (k)
  • Shalateen (k)
  • Sharm El Sheikh (k)
  • Sheikh Zayed (k)
  • Sheikh Zuweid (k)
  • Shibin El Kom (k)
  • Shibin El Kom (m)
  • Shibin El Qanatir (m)
  • Shirbin (m)
  • Shubra (k)
  • Shubra El Kheima 1 (k)
  • Shubra El Kheima 2 (k)
  • Shubrakhit (m)
  • Shurtet El Dakhla (m)
  • Shurtet El Farafra (m)
  • Shurtet El Qasima (k)
  • Shurtet Rumana (k)
  • Sidfa (m)
  • Sidi Barrani (k)
  • Sidi Gaber (k)
  • Sidi Salem (m)
  • Sinnuris (m)
  • Siwa (k)
  • Sohag (m)
  • Sohag 1 (k)
  • Sohag 2 (k)
  • Suez (k)
  • Suez Port Police Dept. (p)
  • Sumusta El Waqf (m)
  • Taba (k)
  • Tahta (k)
  • Tahta (m)
  • Tala (m)
  • Talkha (m)
  • Tamiya (m)
  • Tanta (m)
  • Tanta 1 (k)
  • Tanta 2 (k)
  • Tell El Kebir (m)
  • Tibah Police Dept. (m)
  • Tima (m)
  • Timay El Imdid (m)
  • Tukh (m)
  • Tura (k)
  • Wadi El Natrun (m)
  • Yousef El Seddik (m)
  • Zagazig (m)
  • Zagazig 1 (k)
  • Zagazig 2 (k)
  • Zamalek (k)
  • Zefta (m)
  • Zeitoun (k)

Submunicipal divisions

[edit]

The village is the smallest local unit in rural communities, and is the equivalent of a district in urban areas. However, villages differ from each other in terms of legal status. The heads of villages or districts are appointed by the respective governors.[26] In addition to this, districts are occasionally further divided into sub-district neighborhoods called sheyakha in rural areas, or residential districts (singular: حي سكني ḥay sakani, plural: أحياء سكنية aḥya' sakaniya) in urban areas.[27]

Demographics

[edit]

Urban and rural populations

[edit]

Data taken from CAPMAS:[21]

Governorate % Urban Population (2016) Rural Urban
Alexandria 98.8 4,812,186 56,698 4,755,488
Aswan 42.3 1,431,488 826,543 604,945
Asyut 26.5 4,245,215 3,119,112 1,126,103
Beheira 19.5 5,804,262 4,674,346 1,129,916
Beni Suef 23.2 2,856,812 2,193,871 662,941
Cairo 100.0 9,278,441 0 9,278,441
Dakahlia 28.2 5,949,001 4,271,428 1,677,573
Damietta 38.7 1,330,843 815,244 515,599
Faiyum 22.5 3,170,150 2,456,368 713,782
Gharbia 30.0 4,751,865 3,324,630 1,427,235
Giza 58.6 7,585,115 3,138,310 4,446,805
Ismailia 45.4 1,178,641 643,778 534,863
Kafr El Sheikh 23.1 3,172,753 2,441,246 731,507
Luxor 37.8 1,147,058 713,422 433,636
Matruh 70.6 447,846 131,841 316,005
Minya 18.9 5,156,702 4,183,284 973,418
Monufia 20.6 3,941,293 3,128,460 812,833
New Valley 48.0 225,416 117,180 108,236
North Sinai 60.2 434,781 173,095 261,686
Port Said 100.0 666,599 0 666,599
Qalyubia 44.7 5,105,972 2,825,045 2,280,927
Qena 19.7 3,045,504 2,445,051 600,453
Red Sea 95.1 345,775 17,062 328,713
Sharqia 23.1 6,485,412 4,987,707 1,497,705
Sohag 21.4 4,603,861 3,618,543 985,318
South Sinai 51.1 167,426 81,924 85,502
Suez 100.0 622,859 0 622,859
Total 42.7 87,963,276 50,384,188 37,579,088

Population density

[edit]
Egyptian Population Density in pre-2013 administrative divisions[needs update]

Data taken from CAPMAS:.[21] Information for population is in thousands, pop density - persons/km2 and area is in km2.

Governorate Population in thousands (2014-07-01) Pop. Density (Inhabited Area) Pop. Density (Total Area) % Inhabited to Total Inhabited Area Total Area
Alexandria 4,761 2,841.5 2,070.0 72.8 1,675.50 2,300.00
Aswan 1,412 13,477.1 22.5 0.2 104.77 62,726.00
Asyut 4,181 2,656.3 161.3 6.1 1,574.00 25,926.00
Beheira 5,720 806.3 582.1 72.2 7,093.84 9,826.00
Beni Suef 2,812 2,053.4 256.7 12.5 1,369.41 10,954.00
Cairo 9,184 48,235.3 2,976.8 6.2 190.40 3,085.12
Dakahlia 5,881 1,662.1 1,662.1 100.0 3,538.23 3,538.23
Damietta 1,316 1,968.7 1,445.7 73.4 668.47 910.26
Faiyum 3,118 1,680.0 513.8 30.6 1,856.00 6,068.00
Gharbia 4,698 2,418.7 2,418.7 100.0 1,942.34 1,942.34
Giza 7,487 6,286.3 567.9 9.0 1,191.00 13,184.00
Ismailia 1,162 229.3 229.3 100.0 5,066.97 5,066.97
Kafr El Sheikh 3,132 903.5 903.5 100.0 3,466.69 3,466.69
Luxor 1,132 4,992.7 469.8 9.4 226.73 2,409.68
Matruh 437 111.4 2.6 2.4 3,921.40 166,563.00
Minya 5,076 2,104.8 157.3 7.5 2,411.65 32,279.00
Monufia 3,890 1,596.9 1,556.6 97.5 2,435.93 2,499.00
New Valley 222 205.1 0.5 0.2 1,082.24 440,098.00
North Sinai 428 203.7 14.8 7.2 2,100.84 28,992.00
Port Said 660 499.7 490.7 98.2 1,320.68 1,344.96
Qalyubia 5,044 4,702.1 4,486.4 95.4 1,072.72 1,124.28
Qena 3,001 1,724.1 277.9 16.1 1,740.63 10,798.00
Red Sea 341 4,794.0 2.9 0.1 71.13 119,099.13
Sharqia 6,402 1,343.7 1,303.6 97.0 4,764.28 4,911.00
Sohag 4,536 2,845.8 411.5 14.5 1,593.92 11,022.00
South Sinai 166 9.9 5.3 53.7 16,791.00 31,272.00
Suez 615 68.3 68.3 100.0 9,002.21 9,002.21
Total 86,814 1109.1 85.9 7.8 78272.98 1010407.87

See also

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References

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