Egypt Removes All of Cairo’s Iconic Nile Houseboats
CAIRO (Middle East Eye) – Egyptian authorities have completed the removal of an entire community of houseboats in Cairo, which floated near the Nile banks, as an official Monday deadline came into effect.
Since last month, Egyptian officials from the Central Administration for the Protection of the River Nile and the river police had started removing 32 houseboats in the Kit Kat area of the Giza neighborhood of the capital.
Some residents had lived in their houseboats for dozens of years, tending their front gardens and seeing their children and grandchildren grow up on the river.
The 32 houseboats sat on a narrow section of the Nile bank, that stretched nearly one kilometer up to the Imbaba Bridge.
Manar, an architect, and her mother Nahed used to live in houseboat number 39.
Manar told Middle East Eye that her father, a war veteran who fought in the 1973 war against the Zionist regime, had invested his army end-of-service compensation and sold two flats to buy the houseboat in 2017.
“I’ve packed up all of our stuff four months ago. I always dreamed of living in a houseboat when I was a kid, when we used to go fishing in the Nile, but my dream had turned into a nightmare,” she said.
“I think it will be the last day of my life when I get out of my house boat.”
Egyptian authorities had told the residents to obtain a commercial permit, normally purchased by restaurants and cafes, to keep the houseboat in its place, but they had refused.
Ahdaf Soueif, an Egyptian-British novelist who lives in houseboat number 53, told MEE that the authorities had cut their water and electricity in recent days, describing the removal orders as “displacement decisions”.
On Monday morning, a last-minute meeting between residents and officials at the Ministry of Justice did not resolve the issue of removing the houseboats. However, some residents may store their houseboats until authorities allow them to move to another location on the Nile river.
Egyptian houseboats were once a thriving community on the Nile, where society’s elite lived.
Before the 1960s, almost 600 houseboats were floating near the upmarket area of Zamalek, homes to writers, musicians, and media figures.