Egyptian president Sisi tours Grand Egyptian Museum after grand opening | ABS-CBN News
Nov 2, 2025
Prime ministers, presidents and royalty descended on Cairo on Saturday (November 1) to attend the spectacle-laden inauguration of a sprawling new museum built near the Pyramids to house one of the world's richest collections of antiquities.
President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and his wife Entissar Amer toured the museum along with dozens of guests.
The inauguration of the Grand Egyptian Museum, or GEM, marks the end of a two-decade construction effort hampered by the Arab Spring uprisings, pandemic and wars in neighboring countries.
The audience included German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, Democratic Republic of Congo President Felix Tshisekedi, and the crown princes of Oman and Bahrain.
The museum’s most heavily promoted attraction is the expansive collection of treasures from Tutankhamun's tomb, uncovered in 1922, including the boy-king's golden burial mask, throne and sarcophagus, and thousands of other objects. A colossal statue of Ramses II that sat for decades in a downtown Cairo square bearing the pharaoh's name now adorns the grand entry hall.
The complex's sleek design evoking the Pyramids cuts a marked contrast to the dusty and often outmoded displays in the neoclassical Egyptian Museum that opened over a century ago in central Cairo overlooking Tahrir Square. (Production: Mussab Al-Khairalla)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fJeIo3wrMQo
Get a First Look Inside the New $1B Grand Egyptian Museum
Today
Oct 30, 2025
More than a century after King Tutankhamun's tomb was first discovered, all of the treasures that were found inside are being put on display for the very first time at the long-awaited $1 billion Grand Egyptian Museum. Reporting for TODAY, NBC’s Keir Simmons shares an exclusive inside look at the galleries before they open to the public.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xhArwI0BEEg
Today
Oct 30, 2025
More than a century after King Tutankhamun's tomb was first discovered, all of the treasures that were found inside are being put on display for the very first time at the long-awaited $1 billion Grand Egyptian Museum. Reporting for TODAY, NBC’s Keir Simmons shares an exclusive inside look at the galleries before they open to the public.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xhArwI0BEEg
https://www.facebook.com/BBCnewsThai/posts/pfbid02wewC1y35ghoUbxQrg4oZhsyCpNvobonFw1u62jNfezV5Bn6dAYy4nWeWa1xcjcF3l