Mohamed Fahmy Editor-in-Chief Egypt is in the process of rewriting the rules of higher education. Under President Abdel Fattah El Sisi’s directives, the Armed Forces have established Kayan University, a striking new institution. This is not just another university, according to Lieutenant General Ashraf Salem Zaher, Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces and Minister of Defence and Military Production. It is a purposeful combination of strict military discipline and state-of-the-art civilian innovation. The state is looking far beyond traditional boots on the ground. In the modern era, national security is waged in operating theatres, data centres, and code repositories. Kayan University aims to create a new pool of leaders capable of navigating this complex landscape. The university operates on a clever, highly flexible dual-track system designed to serve both the military establishment and civil society. The military track recruits top-tier graduates holding bachelors or master’s degrees in medical fields. Over a rigorous one-year stint, these specialists undergo intensive military training to commission as specialised officers. Entry is highly competitive, requiring an academic grade of at least “Very Good”, alongside strict age limits. The civilian track is open to high school and Al-Azhar graduates from the 2025 and 2026 cohorts. This stream offers elite, civilian-status education in highly strategic sectors. The curriculum for civilians targets the industries that will define the coming decades. Advanced medical programmes including medicine, dentistry, physiotherapy, and pharmacy run for six to seven years, inclusive of residency periods. Meanwhile, a tech-heavy, four-year credit-hour stream covers software engineering, cybersecurity, data science, and robotics. A war on nepotism In a region where social connections have historically unlocked doors, Kayan University is drawing a hard line in the sand. The selection process has been entirely automated, stripped of human bias, and handed over to an unyielding digital ecosystem. Prospective students are pushed through a tough gauntlet of physical, medical, and psychological evaluations. This is followed by rigorous aptitude testing in English, IT, physics, chemistry, biology, and a global IQ test. Only those who survive these electronic filters make it to the final interview. The message from the top is uncompromising. Lieutenant General Ashraf Salem Zaher, the Minister of Defence, explicitly warned applicants to ignore any rumours of backroom deals or nepotism. “An applicant’s capability and excellence are the sole gateway to admission,” Zaher stated, cementing a new era of absolute meritocracy. The human face of sacrifice Ultimately, Kayan University represents a profound shift in how the state values its young people. It proves that true national defence requires the cultivation of intellect just as much as physical fortitude. By demanding total transparency, Egypt is offering its brightest minds a rare and honest promise: your merit is your passport. Behind the high-tech screening labs and the imposing military infrastructure lies a deeply human story. It is the story of young Egyptians eager to serve their country, armed not with weapons, but with stethoscopes and source code. In this bold new chapter, the state recognises that the ultimate shield of the new republic is the cultivated mind of its young people, proving that true patriotism is found in the quiet, exhausting sacrifice of human potential dedicated to the collective good. The post Building minds, defending nations appeared first on Egyptian Gazette.