
Egypt detains nearly 200 foreigners who flew in to join Gaza march
Egyptian authorities have detained and questioned more than 200 people who arrived in Cairo to participate in the Global March to Gaza, an international action intended to break Israel's siege on the territory, the organisers said on Thursday.
According to the march organisers, some 4000 people from over 40 countries had booked flights to Cairo, with many already arriving ahead of the planned march.
The activists had flown to Cairo to join a grassroots land convoy which set off from the Tunisian capital on Monday in the hopes of reaching Egypt's Rafah border with Gaza as a 'symbolic act' to spotlight Israel's crippling 18-year siege on the territory.
Thousands of volunteers from Algeria, Egypt, Libya, Morocco and Tunisia left the Tunisian capital in a 100-vehicle convoy to raise international awareness of the humanitarian crisis in Gaza and deliver life-saving aid, organisers said. An online tracker shows that they are in the Libyan city of Misrata as of Thursday afternoon.
They also said that the Egyptian government has yet to officially respond to their request for permission to proceed with the march but that they are planning to proceed with it anyway.
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"We hope to be able to work alongside the Egyptian government as a key and valued partner. Our priorities are the same: demanding the end of the Palestinian genocide," the organisers said in a statement Thursday shared with Middle East Eye.
The initiative's spokesperson, Saif Abu Keshek, told AFP that over 200 pro-Palestine activists had been detained at Cairo airport 'or are being questioned at hotels across Cairo,' adding that detainees include US, Dutch, Australian, French, Spanish, Moroccan and Algerian nationals.
The activists were set to travel by bus to the city of El-Arish in the Sinai Peninsula on Friday, before embarking on a march to the border with Gaza, where they will camp for three days in a bid to pressure the authorities to open the border.
According to Abu Keshek, plainclothes police rounded up activists in Cairo hotels, questioning them and in some cases confiscating mobile phones and searching personal belongings.
He added that following interrogations, some activists were arrested, while others were released.
"Our legal services are working on these cases, as we have all complied with all the legal requirements of the Egyptian authorities," the organisers said in a statement on Thursday.
"Meanwhile, thousands of march participants are already in Egypt, ready to begin the journey to El-Arish tomorrow and then continue on foot to Rafah, where we hope to arrive this Sunday."
Deportations
Egyptian news outlet Mada Masr reported that 40 Algerian nationals were detained on Wednesday morning and released after 24 hours, while 10 members of a delegation arriving from Morocco were reportedly turned back at the airport.
Several Turkish nationals were also reportedly deported after they raised Palestinian flags outside their hotel, according to a source that spoke to Mada Masr.
North African 'resilience convoy' heads to Gaza, aiming to break Israel's siege Read More »
Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz has urged the Egyptian authorities to block 'the jihadist protesters,' insisting that they 'would endanger the safety of (Israeli) soldiers and will not be allowed".
He added that if Cairo fails to halt the march, Israeli forces would intervene to stop it.
While the Egyptian foreign ministry has said that it backs 'pressure on Israel' to lift its crippling blockade on Gaza, it stressed that foreigners seeking to visit the border must receive official approval.
A government source was quoted by Mada Masr as saying that the Egyptian authorities had tried to coordinate with departure countries to prevent the participants from reaching Egypt.
The "Sumud" convoy, which means resilience and steadfastness in Arabic, is currently at Libya's Misrata.
It includes trade union and political figures, as well as human rights activists, athletes, lawyers, doctors, journalists, and members of youth organisations.
Some pro-government figures in Egypt claim the plan is a "political scheme" by people affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood, which is outlawed in Egypt - labelling it an "anti-Egyptian establishment", rather than a pro-Palestinian, effort.
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