Nasser City

Nasser City (Arabic: مدينة الناصر madīnat an-nāṣir), officially Gamal Abdel Nasser City (مدينة جمال عبد الناصر madīnat jamāl ‘abd an-nāṣir), is the capital and tenth most populous city of the Arab Union, home to a population of 3,138,405 according to the census of December 2020. It is also at the centre of a metropolitan area of over 7.71 million people. Nasser City is governed as a single municipality under the jurisdiction of the federal government, administratively separate from the 20 republics (federated states) of the Arab Union, which constitute the rest of the country; its metropolitan area consists of an additional 22 surrounding municipalities in Syria, Palestine and Jordan.

All ministries, agencies, offices and other headquarters of the federal government are located within the boundaries of the capital, as well as most federal government facilities and institutions; the remainder are located in the adjacent suburbs located in one of the three surrounding republics.

Nasser City is bound by the Sea of Galilee to the north and the River Jordan to the west; it is the largest planned city in the Arab Union, established in 1971 following the death of first President of the Arab Union Gamal Abdel Nasser, after whom the city was named. The decision to create a federal capital city outside the jurisdiction of any of the 20 republics was mainly a response to the primacy of Cairo, the capital of the Egyptian Arab Republic and federal capital from 1958 to 1971; since Egypt already constituted almost a third of the total Arab Union population by 1970, President Hafez al-Assad decided the seat of the federal government should be moved to a more neutral setting. As such, following the passing of the Establishment Act, 1971 by the Arab Congress on 5 April 1971 and its ratification (and thereby incorporation of the new municipality) the following day via a presidential executive order, Nasser City was officially established. Construction began 10 June 1971, and was completed 22 November 1974, with the federal government finished moving to the new city by the start of 1975.

As per the planned setting for the new federal capital detailed in the Establishment Act, the Palestinian Arab Republic was to cede all territory east of the River Jordan and south of the Sea of Galilee to the federal government. As a planned city, its urban landscape reflects its status as federal capital, and is composed of seven boroughs divided from each other by parks, gardens, greenways, and other natural and public spaces. The Presidential Palace, known officially as the "Garden Estate", sits on a mount to the west of the city centre in the borough of Kiryat Jalil, overlooking the Sea of Galilee, while the Arab Congress is located on Victory Square, the nucleus of the city centre which is also home to many other federal government agencies as well as many corporate and non-governmental offices.