CAIRO, Egypt (UPDATED) – Egypt's prime minister and his cabinet resigned on Saturday, September 12, following a corruption scandal, and President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi tasked the oil minister with forming a new government.
A senior government official told Agence France-Presse (AFP) the reshuffle was meant to "pump new blood" into the government after the arrest on Monday of agriculture minister Salah Helal on suspicion of taking bribes.
The presidency said prime minister Ibrahim Mahlab handed his government's resignation to Sisi who accepted it, and tasked outgoing oil minister Sharif Ismail with forming the new cabinet within a week.
A statement from the presidency said the outgoing government will stay on in a caretaker role till then.
Egyptian media had reported an impending reshuffle after Helal's arrest.
He was detained after Sisi asked him to resign, in connection with an investigation into corruption.
Helal and his chief of staff were accused of having "requested and received" bribes from a businessman, through an intermediary, to legalize the purchase of state property.
The government had denied the reports of a reshuffle, and said no other ministers had been implicated in the corruption case.
But there have growing calls for Mahlab's resignation and increasing protests by civil servants over a new law that centralizes promotions while taxing bonuses.
"The main reason was the president was displeased with the job of some ministers, and his feeling that the government wasn't achieving what he wanted, especially in light of complaints by citizens regarding services," said Mostafa Kamel al-Sayyed, a Cairo University political science professor.
Mahlab's resignation comes as Egypt prepares to hold long-delayed legislative elections in two phases between October 17 and December 2.
Discontent over prices
The elections had initially been scheduled for early 2015 but were cancelled by a court on technical grounds.
Mahlab, who had headed the Arab Contractors construction firm, had been appointed by interim president Adly Mansour in March 2014, less than a year after the army toppled Islamist president Mohamed Morsi.
He was viewed as a capable technocrat close to Sisi, the former army chief who won elections in May that year.
Morsi's removal and detention had unleashed a deadly crackdown on Islamists that killed hundreds of protesters, while the army struggled to quash a jihadist insurgency in the Sinai Peninsula.
The government had enjoyed support in the face of militants, who have killed hundreds of soldiers, but in recent months came under fire for corruption and the unpopular civil service law.
There has also been growing discontent over a rise in food prices and slashes to the government's generous fuel subsidy system as Sisi pushes to narrow a budget deficit.
The absence of a parliament had allowed Sisi to pass decrees virtually unchecked, including the subsidy cuts that previous governments had shirked to avoid unrest.
The new parliament, expected to begin by the end of the year, will review those laws.
It is unlikely to present Sisi with any sustained opposition and will probably be dominated by Sisi loyalists and weak and fractured political parties that have generally been supportive of the president.
The previous parliament, elected in 2011 after an uprising ousted veteran president Hosni Mubarak, had been dominated by Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood movement.
The Islamist group was banned after Morsi's overthrow in July 2013, and thousands of its members, including top leaders, have been jailed. – Samer al-Atrush, AFP/Rappler.com