Hanafy El Gebaly

Hanafy Ali El-Gebali is an Egyptian politician. He is the president of the Egyptian parliament of the House of Representatives since October 2020. He was elected as Speaker of the House of Representatives on 12 January 2021.

Hanafy Ali El-Gebali
Speaker of the House of Representatives
Assumed office
12 January 2021
DeputyMohamed M. Abou El Enein, Ahmed Saad Eddine
Preceded byAli Abdel 3Aal
Chief Justice of the Supreme Constitutional Court
Chancellor
In office
March 2018  June 2019
Preceded byAbdel-Wahab Abdel-Razeq
Succeeded bySaeed Marie
Personal details
Born (1949-07-14) 14 July 1949
Cairo, Egypt
Political partyIndependent politician
Alma materCairo University

El-Gebali previously served as chief justice of the Supreme Constitutional Court.[1]

Early life

He was born 14 July 1949 in Cairo, Egypt,

He graduated from Cairo University in 1975 and got a post diploma from Ain Shams University in 1977 in criminal law. He earned a PhD in Constitutional law.[2]

Career

He started working in the judicial department and rose to become deputy Attorney General in 1978. He was moved down to Constitutional Court at State Council in 2001 as member and became deputy judge in 2005. He served as a secretary-general of the Union of Arab Constitutional Courts from 2011– 2018. He retired from the judicial board in 2019 and joined the Parliament after serving as the chief of Supreme Constitutional Court in 2019.[3]

When serving as the head of SCC, he issued many rulings in cases up to 227.[4]

He published books that have been translated into different languages.

Votes

He polled 508 votes out of 576 votes of the parliament and the majority of the votes came from the National List for Egypt party. He has been elected into parliament since 2019.[5]

Tiran and Sanafir island controversy

As a judge he approved the maritime border agreement between Egypt and Saudi Arabia. Cairo had agreed to cede the island of Tiran and Sanafir to Saudi Arabia in 2016. Later President Sisi signed the agreement. This caused great irritation to many opposition politicians. When Tiran and Sanafir were transferred, many citizens protested and objections were made against the decision. Gebali claimed that it was the government's decision.[6]

References

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