CAIRO, Sept 23 (Reuters) - Egypt's Prime Minister said on Thursday the government would reallocate the land for Talaat Moustafa's (TMG) Madinaty project back to the firm after a court ruled the first sale contract should be scrapped.
The cabinet spokesman also said a group of ministers was drawing up details of the arrangement for final approval by the cabinet on Sunday.
Prime Minister Ahmed Nazif said the government was not seeking to charge TMG more money in the new contract.
'I hope that there will be no additional financial burdens, because this project has already started under certain conditions and commitments, investments and land prices,' he told reporters.
Egypt's government sold land to TMG, the country's biggest listed developer, for its estimated $3 billion Madinaty project in 2005. But a court ruled in June the contract was illegal because the land was not put up for public auction.
A higher court upheld the decision last week, sending the firm's shares crashing 16 percent in three sessions. The government has since come under pressure from investors in TMG to find a resolution to the row.
A state-appointed legal committee said on Wednesday that the government could reassign the land to TMG after scrapping the original contract because it was in the public interest.
'The ministers of finance, housing and legal affairs are sitting to give us the form of the solution in detail to be discussed in the cabinet meeting on Sunday to be approved,' the spokesman, Magdy Rady, told Reuters.
Building has already started on Madinaty, which is meant to include shops, hotels, homes, schools and a golf course. The plot makes up about two thirds of TMG's land and its shares slumped 16 percent in the three days after the ruling last week.
Rady said the group of minsters were aiming to organise the formal cancellation of the contract, the return of the land and the signing of a new contract reallocating the land to the firm in the same session.
Shares in the firm were up 1.6 percent by 0922 GMT, a little ahead of Egypt's main benchmark index.
(Reporting by Edmund Blair and Ashraf Badr; Writing by Dina Zayed and Alexander Dziadosz; Editing by Jon Loades-Carter) Keywords: TALAATMOUSTAFA CASE/ (alexander.dziadosz@reuters.com; +20 2 2578 3290; Reuters Messaging: alexander.dziadosz.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net) COPYRIGHT Copyright Thomson Reuters 2010. All rights reserved. The copying, republication or redistribution of Reuters News Content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Thomson Reuters.
The cabinet spokesman also said a group of ministers was drawing up details of the arrangement for final approval by the cabinet on Sunday.
Prime Minister Ahmed Nazif said the government was not seeking to charge TMG more money in the new contract.
'I hope that there will be no additional financial burdens, because this project has already started under certain conditions and commitments, investments and land prices,' he told reporters.
Egypt's government sold land to TMG, the country's biggest listed developer, for its estimated $3 billion Madinaty project in 2005. But a court ruled in June the contract was illegal because the land was not put up for public auction.
A higher court upheld the decision last week, sending the firm's shares crashing 16 percent in three sessions. The government has since come under pressure from investors in TMG to find a resolution to the row.
A state-appointed legal committee said on Wednesday that the government could reassign the land to TMG after scrapping the original contract because it was in the public interest.
'The ministers of finance, housing and legal affairs are sitting to give us the form of the solution in detail to be discussed in the cabinet meeting on Sunday to be approved,' the spokesman, Magdy Rady, told Reuters.
Building has already started on Madinaty, which is meant to include shops, hotels, homes, schools and a golf course. The plot makes up about two thirds of TMG's land and its shares slumped 16 percent in the three days after the ruling last week.
Rady said the group of minsters were aiming to organise the formal cancellation of the contract, the return of the land and the signing of a new contract reallocating the land to the firm in the same session.
Shares in the firm were up 1.6 percent by 0922 GMT, a little ahead of Egypt's main benchmark index.
(Reporting by Edmund Blair and Ashraf Badr; Writing by Dina Zayed and Alexander Dziadosz; Editing by Jon Loades-Carter) Keywords: TALAATMOUSTAFA CASE/ (alexander.dziadosz@reuters.com; +20 2 2578 3290; Reuters Messaging: alexander.dziadosz.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net) COPYRIGHT Copyright Thomson Reuters 2010. All rights reserved. The copying, republication or redistribution of Reuters News Content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Thomson Reuters.
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