logo
Gaza march activists say participants in Egypt beaten, detained

Gaza march activists say participants in Egypt beaten, detained

Reuters17-06-2025
CAIRO, June 17 (Reuters) - Organisers of a march to the Egyptian border with Gaza said on Tuesday that three participants were abducted by plainclothes officers in Cairo amid a wave of arbitrary detentions, deportations and abuse by security forces.
Egypt's interior and foreign ministries did not immediately respond to the allegations. Reuters could not independently verify the reported detentions or conditions.
The Global March to Gaza, launched this month, brought over 4,000 activists from more than 80 countries to Egypt in an attempt to peacefully approach the Rafah border crossing and draw attention to Gaza's deepening humanitarian crisis.
Since their arrival, dozens of participants said they have faced airport interrogations, deportations and roadblocks preventing access to the Sinai peninsula, which provides the land route to Gaza.
In a statement on Tuesday, organisers said three international participants were forcibly taken from a Cairo cafe on Monday by security officers who did not identify themselves.
Those named were Jonas Selhi and Huthayfa Abuserriya, both from Norway, and Saif Abukeshek, a Spanish citizen of Palestinian origin and one of the march's organisers.
The statement said that according to Selhi, all three men were blindfolded, beaten and interrogated. Abukeshek, he said, faced especially severe abuse. His whereabouts remain unknown, while Selhi and Abuserriya have since been deported to Norway, organisers said.
Two security sources denied to Reuters that any detainees were treated violently as long as they adhered to procedures and security instructions until their deportation. The sources said that approximately 400 people have been deported, while fewer than 30 remain awaiting deportation and are being held.
"We urge the Egyptian authorities to immediately release Saif Abukeshek and all other detained march participants," the statement said, adding that the group had suspended its Egypt-based plans and made efforts to coordinate with authorities.
Egypt's foreign ministry had previously said travel to the Rafah area required prior approval to ensure safety. Organisers say they sought to coordinate through proper channels.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Really p****d' Trump ‘to reveal aggressive Ukraine weapons plan TODAY' – after saying he's ‘very disappointed' in Putin
‘Really p****d' Trump ‘to reveal aggressive Ukraine weapons plan TODAY' – after saying he's ‘very disappointed' in Putin

Scottish Sun

time17 minutes ago

  • Scottish Sun

‘Really p****d' Trump ‘to reveal aggressive Ukraine weapons plan TODAY' – after saying he's ‘very disappointed' in Putin

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) DONALD Trump said he is "very disappointed" in Vladimir Putin for "bombing people at night" and has vowed to send sophisticated US weapons to Ukraine. The US President is expected to unveil what will be an "agressive" new weapons plan for Ukraine at a high-stakes meeting with Nato secretary-general Mark Rutte today. 7 Donald Trump speaks with the media after attending the FIFA Club World Cup final upon his arrival at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, on Sunday Credit: Reuters 7 A firefighter works at the site of a Russian drone strike in Lviv, Ukraine on Saturday Credit: Reuters 7 The US President is said to be 'very disappointed' with Vladimir Putin Credit: AFP 7 The plan is said to include long-range missiles and offensive systems capable of striking deep inside Russian territory, according to Axios. Returning from the FIFA Club World Cup final, Trump told reporters at Joint Base Andrews on Sunday: "I am very disappointed with President Putin. "I thought he was somebody that meant what he said, and he'll talk so beautifully and then he'll bomb people at night. We don't like that. "We will send them Patriots which they desperately need because Putin … really surprised a lot of people. It's a little bit of a problem there, I don't like it." Read more on Ukraine war KYIV'S REVENGE Putin hit squad 'eliminated' after assassination of Ukrainian spy chief Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham told Axios on Sunday: "Trump is really pissed at Putin. His announcement tomorrow is going to be very aggressive." Trump indicated that the US would not only supply Ukraine with Patriot air defense systems but also "very sophisticated" military hardware. It comes as Russia continues to pound Ukrainian cities with missiles and drones on a nearly-nightly basis. Two people were killed and 28 injured in Kyiv last Thursday alone, with further strikes hitting a maternity hospital in Kharkiv over the weekend. Trump's change in tone marks a dramatic reversal from his earlier position in office, where he had long opposed sending offensive weaponry to Kyiv and clashed openly with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. But frustration has been mounting in recent weeks, particularly following a July 3 phone call with Putin, in which the Kremlin tyrant reportedly told Trump he planned to escalate operations to seize full control of occupied Ukrainian territories within 60 days. "He wants to take all of it," Trump told French President Emmanuel Macron shortly afterwards, according to a source cited by Axios. Nato jets scrambled as Putin launches one of war's biggest attacks in Ukraine That phone call was reportedly a turning point. In the days that followed, Trump intervened to restart US weapons deliveries that had been paused by the Pentagon and vegan crafting a weapons package that appears to include long-range missiles. European countries will foot the bill, Trump said Sunday, with the US manufacturing the arms. "They are going to pay us 100% for them. It is going to be business for us," Trump said. "They do need protection." At Monday's meeting with Nato's Rutte, Trump is also expected to back a sweeping sanctions package targeting Russia's financial and energy sectors. The Telegraph reports that the sanctions bill, led by Senator Graham, would impose asset freezes and banking restrictions on Russian officials, oligarchs and military figures, and ban US investments in Russia's energy industry. "We get a lot of bulls*** thrown at us by Putin, if you want to know the truth," Trump said during a cabinet meeting last week. 7 An explosion of a drone lights up the sky over the city during a Russian drone and missile strike on Kyiv on Thursday Credit: Reuters 7 The site of a drone strike in Odesa, Ukraine, on Friday Credit: EPA 7 Soldiers of Ukraine's 30th Separate Mechanized Brigade fire a Grad multiple rocket launcher towards Russian positions at the frontline in Donetsk region Credit: AP The forthcoming sanctions, which Trump hinted could be rolled out "totally at [his] option," represent a rare show of unity between the White House and hawkish lawmakers in Congress. The move comes amid increasing signs of Russian reliance on foreign allies — especially North Korea. It comes as North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un pledged "unconditional support" for Putin's war in Ukraine during a visit by Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov. According to The New York Post, Kim reaffirmed North Korea's readiness to back all Russian efforts to 'tackle the root cause of the Ukrainian crisis.' The rogue regime has reportedly deployed over 12,000 troops and millions of rounds of artillery to support Russia's war effort, with plans to send tens of thousands more. In exchange, Moscow is believed to be supplying Pyongyang with military equipment and technology, and has committed to aiding in the reconstruction of Russia's war-damaged territories, including Kursk. As North Korea and Russia tighten their military ties, the Trump administration's growing aggressiveness signals a stark turn in U.S. strategy — one that some officials hope will finally shift Putin's calculus. "I will say the Ukrainians were brave, but we gave them the best equipment ever made," Trump said last week. "They were able to shoot down a lot of things."

Zohran Mamdani wants to tax the rich in NYC. People are freaking out.
Zohran Mamdani wants to tax the rich in NYC. People are freaking out.

The Herald Scotland

time2 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Zohran Mamdani wants to tax the rich in NYC. People are freaking out.

The idea, in both cases, is to create revenue by taxing rich people and use the money to pay for other initiatives. Harris sought taxes from the wealthy to pay down the nation's estimated $2 trillion deficit. Mamdani, a democratic socialist, wants free city buses and a freeze on New York rents. Taxing the rich has worked before. In the World War II era, the wealthiest Americans endured a top tax rate above 90% to buoy the economy. But would it work now? Millionaires might flee higher taxes The standard objection is that raising taxes on wealthy Americans will chase them away. They will leave the city, the state or the country, or take steps to avoid paying taxes, such as moving wealth offshore. Here's how opponents greeted Mamdani's proposal: New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, who could veto a tax hike, has said it would prompt millionaires to flee. "I don't want to lose any more people to Palm Beach," she told a television interviewer, according to the New York Post. In a commentary for Reuters, financial writer Marty Fridson warned of "the possibility, if not the probability, that many high earners will leave NYC to escape the added tax bite." The New York Times assembled a rail of escape-from-New-York quotes from business leaders. Sample: "We may consider closing our supermarkets and selling the business," said John Catsimatidis, owner of the Gristedes chain, speaking to The Free Press. Mamdani's campaign estimates that a 2% tax on New Yorkers earning more than $1 million a year would raise $4 billion a year. That projection wouldn't pan out, of course, if enough millionaires left the city to avoid the tax. Are 'millionaire tax' warnings overblown? Are the dire warnings overblown? Maybe so, according to copious research on taxes and their impact on migration. But a lot depends on whom you ask. Higher taxes don't generally prompt wealthy people to move, said Kamolika Das, local policy director at the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, a left-leaning think tank. "Tax policies just really don't drive relocation decisions," Das said. "They've been claiming this for a long time, and there's just very scant evidence to support it." A 2023 study by the nonpartisan Fiscal Policy Institute found "no evidence of significant tax-motivated migration" from New York State, even after tax increases. The main reasons: Top 1% earners move at a lower rate than other income groups. And when they do move, they generally relocate from one high-tax area to another. In 2004, New Jersey raised its top income tax rate on high earners by 2.6 percentage points. "In the next year, a total of 37 millionaires left," said Lindsay Owens, executive director of the Groundwork Collaborative, a progressive thinktank. "But in that very same year, the millionaire population of New Jersey increased by more than 3,000 individuals." Not all researchers agree. California lost high earners over taxes Fridson, the Reuters columnist, cites a study from the nonprofit California Center for Jobs & the Economy. It shows a net loss of $5.3 billion in personal income tax from high earners leaving California in a five-year span after a 2016 ballot measure that extended higher taxes on the wealthy. Higher taxes in New York "will raise revenue. There's no question of that," said Jared Walczak, vice president of state projects at the nonpartisan Tax Foundation. But a tax hike "does drive some people out," he said, "and it can be more significant in New York City than it would be at the state or the national level." Leaving the United States over taxes is one thing, Walczak said. Moving from Manhattan to Hoboken, New Jersey, is quite another. "It is much harder to leave a country than to leave a state," he said, "and harder to leave a state than to leave a city." Walczak notes that the 2% tax increase proposed by Mamdani is a flat rate on all income earned by a wealthy New Yorker, "down to their first dollar." It would raise the top tax rate in the city from roughly 3.9% to 5.9%. At that rate, high earners "would be paying more in city taxes in New York than they would be paying in state taxes in most states," Walczak said. The remote-work boom of recent years spawned pandemic "boom towns," generally lower-tax cities that filled up with refugees from higher-tax cities who could work remotely. "I could work for a firm in New York City but take my residence to, I don't know, Austin, Texas, where they don't have any income tax," said Therese McGuire, professor of strategy at Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management. Research by the Tax Foundation shows that high-tax states tend to lose residents to other states, while low-tax states tend to gain them. Taxes are one factor among many, including jobs, weather, quality of life and the broader cost of living. Other studies suggest that millionaire tax flight is happening, but "only at the margins," and at a negligible rate. "We make our decisions about where to locate ourselves and our families based on a whole host of considerations, many of which are not pecuniary," Owens said.

Spain rocked by 'migrant riots' as far-right groups clash with North Africans
Spain rocked by 'migrant riots' as far-right groups clash with North Africans

Daily Mirror

time5 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Spain rocked by 'migrant riots' as far-right groups clash with North Africans

Five people were hurt and one was arrested during the unrest in the town on Saturday, according to local officials. The town was quieter on Sunday, but government sources said more arrests were expected. A southeastern Spanish town was rocked by violent clashes between far-right activists and North Africans on Saturday night. This incident, one of the most severe in recent decades, follows an attack on an elderly man earlier in the week. ‌ The pensioner was assaulted while strolling down a street in Torre-Pacheco by unidentified attackers during a time of heightened tension between members of the far-right and migrant groups in Spain. ‌ He sustained multiple injuries and is said to be recuperating from his horrifying experience at home. The motive behind the attack remains unknown, and no arrests have been made in relation to the assault. Five individuals were injured and one person was arrested during Saturday's disturbance, as per local authorities. ‌ The town was calmer on Sunday, but government sources anticipate further arrests. Social media videos depict men clad in far-right emblem attire and migrants waving Moroccan flags throwing objects at each other. Another video captures a man being tackled to the ground and beaten by an individual in a white T-shirt, reports the Express. ‌ This eruption of violence comes after several days of escalating tensions and minor disturbances. Mariola Guevara, the central government's representative in the region, informed Spanish public TV that the attack is under investigation. She condemned "hate speech" and "incitement to violence," as far-right groups descended on the town. ‌ The official also pledged to deploy additional Guardia Civil officers to the town to quell the unrest. According to local government data, nearly a third of Torre-Pacheco's residents hail from abroad. A significant number of migrants are employed as day labourers in the agricultural sector in areas surrounding the town, situated in the Murcia region. Recently, the Murcia government had to retract a proposal to purchase housing for unaccompanied migrant minors, following opposition from the far-right Vox party.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store