
Egypt detains over 200 activists ahead of Gaza aid march
Egyptian authorities have detained more than 200 pro-Palestinian activists in Cairo ahead of an international march aiming to break Israel's blockade on Gaza, organisers said Thursday.
Thousands of people taking part in the Global March to Gaza planned to travel to Egypt's Rafah border crossing with the Palestinian territory on Friday to call for increased humanitarian aid access.
"Over 200 participants were detained at Cairo airport or questioned at hotels across Cairo," the march's spokesperson, Saif Abukeshek, told AFP.
The detainees included people from Algeria, Australia, France, Morocco, the Netherlands, Spain and the United States, he said.
Plainclothes officers entered Cairo hotels on Wednesday with lists of names, questioning activists, and in some cases, confiscating phones and searching personal belongings, said Abukeshek.
"After interrogations, some were arrested and others were released."
At Cairo airport, some detainees were held for hours without explanation, Abukeshek said, adding others were deported, without specifying how many.
More than 20 French activists who had planned to join the march were held at Cairo airport for 18 hours, he said.
"What happened was completely unexpected," Abukeshek said.
Footage shared with AFP showed dozens of people with their luggage crammed inside a holding room at the airport.
"We're locked up here in this room with so many people -- some 30-40 people," a German national said in one video. "I called the embassy and they told me their people are trying to figure things out," she said.
Another video obtained by AFP shows more than 30 people aboard a deportation flight from Cairo chanting in French: "The world is with you... Gaza... Gaza".
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Business Recorder
18 minutes ago
- Business Recorder
Thousands protest in Tehran, region against Israel
TEHRAN: Thousands of people rallied in Tehran, Baghdad and Beirut on Friday after weekly prayers to protest Israel's strikes on Iran, chanting slogans against Israel and its main backer, the United States. Images on Iran's state television showed protesters in Tehran holding up photographs of commanders killed since the start of the war, while others waved the flags of Iran and the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah. 'This is the Friday of the Iranian nation's solidarity and resistance across the country,' the news anchor said. 'I will sacrifice my life for my leader,' read a protester's banner, referring to Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. According to state television, protests took place in other cities around the country, including in Tabriz in northwestern Iran and Shiraz in the south. Last week, Israel launched a blistering attack on Iran, prompting Tehran to retaliate with barrages of missiles aimed at Israel. Mohammad Javad Haj Ali Akbari, the Imam leading Tehran's prayers, told worshippers that Israel had attacked Iran out of 'despair', the official IRNA news agency reported. He accused Israel of launching a 'psychological war' to 'pit the people of the country against the government'. 'Their plans were precise, but their calculations were laughable,' the Imam said. With warnings of all-out regional war intensifying, fears are growing over an intervention by Iran-backed Iraqi factions, who have threatened Washington's interests in the region if it were to join Israel in its war against Iran. In Iraq, thousands of supporters of powerful cleric Moqtada Sadr rallied after Friday prayers in Baghdad and other cities, AFP correspondents said. Sadr, who has previously criticised Tehran-backed Iraqi armed factions, retains a devoted following of millions among Iraq's majority community of Shiite Muslims. 'No to Israel! No to America!' chanted demonstrators gathered in the Sadr City district of Baghdad, the cleric's stronghold in the capital. 'It is an unjust war... Israel has no right' to hit Iran, said protester Abu Hussein. 'Israel is not in it for the (Iranian) nuclear (programme). What Israel and the Americans want is to dominate the Middle East,' added the 54-year-old taxi driver.


Business Recorder
18 minutes ago
- Business Recorder
European shares firm
FRANKFURT: European shares rose on Friday after declining for three straight sessions, as a stall in the United States' involvement in the Middle East conflict helped soothe investor concerns. The pan-European STOXX 600 was up 0.6% at 538.85 points at 0834 GMT. The benchmark is set to log a second consecutive weekly fall. Israel and Iran's air war entered a second week and European officials sought to draw Tehran back to the negotiating table. The White House said President Donald Trump will decide within the next two weeks about whether to join Israel in the war. That helped improve market sentiment, spurring some interest in risk assets that were sold off earlier in the week on uncertainty around how long the conflict would go on. 'The investors are taking a little bit more risk on their shoulders... it is perhaps because the US is now giving itself two weeks and maybe some diplomatic opening window there to resolve the situation in Iran,' said Ipek Ozkardeskaya, senior market analyst at Swissquote Bank. Banks rose 1.3%, leading broader gains. Travel and leisure stocks were also up 1.3%, led by a 4.8% gain in Europe's largest travel operator TUI after Barclays upgraded the stock to 'overweight' from 'underweight'. Conversely, energy shares were at the bottom of the index with a 0.3% decline but were headed for a weekly gain. Investors also remain wary of the approaching July 8 tariff-pause deadline, with little progress on trade deals with Washington. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen is still aiming to reach a deal by July 9. 'Geopolitical tensions are kind of hiding the other worries in the market, which are trade negotiations being delayed with the US occupied with what to do with the Middle East,' said Ozkardeskaya. Trump's tariffs have been a source of turmoil and volatility in the last few months, and have already begun to upend global supply chains and threatened economic growth. Most regional bourses were also higher, with ones in Germany and the UK up 0.8% and 0.4% respectively. Among other stocks, London's Berkeley was the biggest percentage decliner, down 6.7%. The homebuilder named current finance chief Richard Stearn as its new CEO, but reported an annual pre-tax profit slightly ahead of market expectations. Eutelsat shares jumped over 19% after the French government announced it would become the satellite company's biggest shareholder following a 1.35 billion-euro ($1.55 billion) capital increase.


Express Tribune
26 minutes ago
- Express Tribune
Oil prices slip as US sanctions ease fears
Crude oil prices have tumbled by 70 per cent since mid-2014, dropping this year below $30 a barrel PHOTO: AFP Listen to article Oil prices slipped on Friday as the US imposed new Iran-related sanctions marking a diplomatic approach that fed hopes of a negotiated agreement, a day after President Donald Trump said he might take two weeks to decide US involvement in the Israel-Iran conflict. Brent crude futures were down $2.27, or 2.9%, to $76.58 a barrel by 11:48 am EDT. US West Texas Intermediate crude for July was down 21 cents or 0.3% at $74.93. The more liquid August contract was down around 0.1%, or 5 cents, to $73.45. Brent was on track to rise 3.2% on the week, while front-month US crude futures were set to increase by 2.7%. President Donald Trump's administration has issued fresh Iran-related sanctions, including on two entities based in Hong Kong, and counter-terrorism-related sanctions, according to a notice posted to the US Treasury Department website. The sanctions target at least 20 entities, five individuals and three vessels, according to Treasury's Office of Foreign Asset Control. "Those sanctions are cutting both ways, they may be part of a broader negotiation approach towards Iran. The fact they are undertaking this is a signal they are trying to resolve this outside of conflict," said John Kilduff, partner at Again Capital in New York.