© Alkis
Konstantinidis / Reuters
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An Egyptian billionaire,
who has been offering to buy a Mediterranean island to provide refugees with
decent living conditions, has identified potential locations and is now in
talks to purchase two private Greek islands. Egyptian TV tycoon Naguib Sawiris, whose
fortune is worth an estimated US$3 billion, has “identified two privately owned
Greek islands that constitute a good opportunity for the project,” a statement
from his communication office reads.
“We
have corresponded with the owners and expressed our interest to go into
negotiation[s] with them,” the statement added, clarifying that the islands, if
purchased, would still “fall under Greece's jurisdiction.”
RT America report continues:
The
future of the deal will depend on Athens’ approval to host the maximum number
of refugees permitted under the country’s laws. Sawiris also hopes that Greece
will take care of the “administrative process” of bringing the future migrant
residence onto the islands.
The
61-year-old also claimed that the UN’s refugee agency UNHCR offered to
co-operate on the project, which requires a minimum US$100mn investment. The
billionaire also seeks to create a new joint-stock company with a starting
capital of US$100mn which will be tasked with handling donations.
Sawiris Tweet: After
massive interest to contribute through donations&volunteering I'm sharing
latest updates #aylanISLAND
project.
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The
third richest man in Africa has promoted the idea of “Aylan Island,” named in
memory of Aylan Kurdi, ever since the story three-year-old Syrian toddler who
washed up on a Turkish beach after a failed attempt to get to the Greek island
of Kos was photo-documented, breaking international headlines earlier this
month.
In
an interview with Newsweek, the billionaire said that his letters to the
Italian prime minister, Matteo Renzi, and his Greek counterpart, Alexis
Tsipras, have yet to be acknowledged by the two governments.
“I
sent a letter saying that I need them to provide me permission to take the
refugees there and if they have an island to sell, I am a buyer,” he told
Newsweek. “It would help me much and what I need from them is the approval to
get the refugees there and the administrative support,” in terms of customs and
passport control as well as a small unit for security.
While
acknowledging that he is willing to spend up to US$200 million on the purchase,
the TV tycoon praised the strong response from volunteers and investors that
are willing to help the noble cause.
“I
have got around 10,000 emails. Many people said they would volunteer to come
and help me build this city, I have two people saying they want to donate US$10m
and so on,” he said.
Besides
helping out the refugees, Sawiris says that buying Mediterranean island would
help out austerity stricken Athens.
“I know that the Greek
government owns a lot of islands that are uninhabited and they need the money.
It would be doing the EU a favor, that is giving [Greece] the money anyhow,”
Sawiris told Newsweek. “So it would look good that they are helping a
humanitarian idea. It would be saving the EU from a burden and helping to do
something [about the refugee crisis].”
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