Egyptian Prime Minister Hisham Qandil said a cabinet reshuffle of 11 ministerial changes will be announced by morning tomorrow in a move which falls short of opposition demands and bolsters the ruling Islamists.
The opposition had demanded a unity government and Qandil's sacking, but a partial list of new ministers published by the official MENA agency includes at least one affiliated with President Mohammed Mursi's Muslim Brotherhood.
The ministries affected include oil, higher education and agriculture, official news agency MENA reported. A replacement will be named for the justice minister, Ahmed Mekky, who resigned.
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"The reshuffle will take place today or by tomorrow morning at the latest," Qandil told state television.
The Muslim Brotherhood movement already has seven ministers, or less than a third of the cabinet. Its Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) had also called for a reshuffle to gain more seats.
Mursi has repeatedly declared his confidence in Qandil, whose sacking is demanded by a coalition of opposition groups who accuse him of having mismanaged Egypt's dire economy.
The opposition has set his departure as a condition for dropping a boycott of parliamentary elections, possibly in the autumn.
The opposition's protracted deadlock with Mursi has delayed a much needed USD 4.8 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund.
Qandil's government, appointed after Mursi's election in June, has tried to cope with a battered economy despite billions of dollars in aid from energy-rich Qatar and some other countries.