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Egypt and the DRC are building exactly the kind of African partnership the continent needs — signing cooperation deals on water infrastructure, solar-powered drinking stations, irrigation modernization and Nile Basin governance. Cairo backed the DRC ceasefire agreement, pledged humanitarian aid for eastern Congo, and is transferring real technical expertise to Kinshasa. This is practical, development-driven diplomacy that strengthens sovereignty and stability across the region.
Two leaders, two different failures. While Tshisekedi has failed to secure eastern Congo as M23 captured major cities and displaced millions, Sisi's Egypt is hardly a partner worth celebrating. It crushed democratic elections, flooded Gaza's lifeline tunnels with sewage and turned Tahrir Square into a police-state showcase. Sisi seized power through a UAE-backed coup, jailed Egypt's first democratically elected president until he died in custody, and then banned protests. Their latest partnership says more about political convenience than effective leadership.