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Prof. Dr. Mahmoud El-Metini participates in the World Youth Forum in the presence of President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi

Prof. Dr. Mahmoud El-Metini, President of Ain Shams University, participated in the World Youth Forum, in the presence of President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi and a group of world leaders and leaders and prominent influential figures, during the period from 10 to 13 January 2022 in Sharm El-Sheikh, South Sinai.

The youth of the Ain Shams University choir team also sent a message of love and peace to all the youth of the world, at the conclusion of the activities of the fourth session of the World Youth Forum and the launch of the monument to the revival of humanity.

The World Youth Forum is a platform to open up the horizons of dialogue between the youth of Egypt and the world, as well as presenting those with dreams and wills their vision to achieve development at all levels, as the Forum is considered a global youth dialogue platform.

This version of the forum came to confirm the Egyptian state's ability to organize many international conferences in light of the Corona pandemic that is sweeping the world.

During the closing ceremony of the World Youth Forum, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi honored a number of young people and influential and inspiring personalities, including Dina Ayman, who works as a program manager at Microsoft Corporation in the United States, who confirmed that: “There are no scientific differences between Egyptians and others. World Youth Forum I met many Egyptian geniuses and got to know them, and they were very distinguished in their field.”

She added: "I do not find anything we lack in Egypt to achieve a breakthrough in the scientific field, especially since when I met Egyptians during the forum, I found that they had produced very impressive scientific research, and this forum was an opportunity to show how Egypt developed, and the development of the field of research in it, we only lack a little in the field Technology, the virtual world, and so on, we don't need anything to catch up with science."