Archive for Foreign Ministry

A number of professional syndicates are calling on Egyptian authorities to investigate why syndicate members–including doctors, engineeers, and journalists–have been detained in the United Arab Emirates.

Relatives of Ahmed Gaafar, a journalist who runs a private media center in Dubai, said he disappeared two weeks ago while on his way home from work in Dubai. His family said that all of his personal belongings disappeared. Dubai police revelated that they had detained Gaafar six days ago. The family then called on the Journalists Syndicate and the Arab Journalists’ Union to intervene and demand information about the reasons for his detention.

Karem Mahmoud, the sydicate’s secretary, said the board received a complaint from the family on Saturday and that the syndicate contacted the foreign ministry regarding the circumstances of his detention.

Professional syndicates of doctors and physical therapists are likewise calling on the presidency and the foreign ministry to intervene in order to determine why three Egyptian doctors were detained by Emirati authorities. It also called on the physical therapists association in the UAE to form a fact-finding committee to investigate detentions by what they called an "unknown authority" and to investigate why detainees' families have been prevented from traveling home from the UAE without legal justification.

The Doctors’ Syndicate Freedom Committee said that three detainees were getting ready to return home to Egypt along with their families when their houses were attacked and their personal computers were seized. The committee threatened to stage protests outside the Emirati embassy in Cairo, saying there are “other steps for escalation if the detainees are not released and their families allowed to return back to their homeland.”

Meanwhile, the Engineers Syndicate’s branch in Daqahliya said Emirati authorities had arrested two members in the Dubai airport. They were taken to an unknown location 20 days ago. One of the detainees’ wives said her husband had decided to close the contracting company he owns in Dubai and that he was planning his return to Egypt when he was arrested.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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The Nation
Bomb at Egyptian-run church in Libya kills 2
USA TODAY
TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) — Egypt's Foreign Ministry says an explosion at an Egyptian Coptic church in Libya's third largest city, Misrata, has killed two people and wounded two others. The statement by the Foreign Ministry says Sunday's explosion killed
Attack on Coptic church building in Libya kills twoNBCNews.com
Libya Coptic church blast kills two EgyptiansBBC News
Explosion at Coptic church in Misrata kills oneLibya Herald
The Australian
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Press TV
Bomb at Egyptian-Run Church in Libya Kills 2
ABC News
Egypt's Foreign Ministry says an explosion at an Egyptian Coptic church in Libya's third largest city, Misrata, has killed two people and wounded two others. The statement by the Foreign Ministry says Sunday's explosion killed two Egyptian citizens
Attack on Coptic church building in Libya kills twoNBCNews.com
Libya church blast kills two EgyptiansThe Australian
Libya church blast kills 2 Egyptians: embassyThe Daily Star
Press TV
all 160 news articles »
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Russia will host Syria peace envoy Lakhdar Brahimi this week after Syrian officials held talks in Moscow on Thursday as part of a diplomatic drive to try to agree a plan to end the 21-month-old conflict, Russia’s foreign ministry said.

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Around 66 percent of Egyptian expatriates have voted in favor of the draft constitution, while 34 percent have rejected it, according to preliminary results.

Of the more than 500,000 eligible expatriate voters, approximately 253,000 cast ballots at embassies and consulates abroad: 160,077 approved of the charter and 74,914 voted it down.

Most of those who voted in favor of the constitution live in the Gulf region. Of the  586,801 Egyptian voters abroad, 261,924 reside in Saudi Arabia and 119,234 in Kuwait.

Expatriate voting ran from last Wednesday until Monday. The Foreign Ministry asked Egyptian embassies and consulates to announce the results as soon as ballot counting is over,  although the referendum is still going on in Egypt. The final results of expatriate voting are expected to be announced during a press conference at the Foreign Ministry in the presence of representatives from the High Judicial Elections Commission.

The vote counting was conducted in the presence of representatives from Egyptian communities abroad and the media.

The majority of expatriate voters who cast ballots in most Western and North African countries voted against the constitution, but did so in far lower numbers than voters in the Gulf.

Egypt's remaining governorates will go to the polls Saturday, after 10 governorates voted last week.

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Some 4,000 Egyptian citizens have been evacuated from Syria due to the conflict raging there, according to Egypt’s Foreign Ministry.

The ministry added that only a small number of Egyptian citizens are left in Syria, and that they refuse to leave on their own.

Ali al-Ashry, assistant to the foreign minister for consular affairs and Egyptians abroad, said the Egyptian Embassy in Damascus has evacuated about 80 Egyptian citizens over the past few days, in addition to 11 Syrians who are wives, husbands or children of evacuated Egyptian nationals.

Evacuations have taken place with the cooperation of Syrian and Lebanese authorities. The Egyptian Embassy in Syria has helped Egyptians travel by land into Lebanon to Beirut-Rafiq Hariri International Airport, and Lebanese authorities have agreed to grant Egyptians transit visas.

Egypt withdrew its ambassador to Syria in February to protest the regime's attacks against civilians, after protests against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad erupted in March 2011.

Egypt has called for an end to the civil war in Syria and has demanded Assad step down.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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There have been no attempts to influence expat voters or prevent them from voting at Egypt’s consulate and embassies abroad, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Amr Roshdy said on Friday.

Such rumors had already begun days head of the referendum, Roshdy claimed. For instance, it was rumored that 200,000 ballot papers had been printed to rig the referendum in Kuwait, although Roshdy said it has been proven that there are only 60,000 Egyptian voters there.

Voting abroad doesn’t consist of simply submitting the ballot sheet, Roshdy explained. Expat voters also must submit copies of their ID cards, residence visa, secret registration number and an envelope containing the ballot. They also must sign their names on the registration rolls submitted by the High Elections Commission.

The ministry also denounced rumors that the Egyptian embassy in Switzerland had accepted votes by phone. “Using the phone works for the stock market, not for voting,” Roshdy said.

Roshdy also denied claims that the Egyptian Embassy in Riyad had printed flyers calling on citizens to support the draft constitution. “Some of the Egyptian community associations, which lack official ties with the embassy, used its logo on their flyers to convince voters to approve the constitution. Both the ministry and the embassy have denounced this,” he said.

The Foreign Ministry is a national institution to which all Egyptians belong, and which isn’t associated with any political party, Roshdy said. It only aims to help Egyptian expats participate in the voting process.

Amidst these rumors, expat voting continues in several countries on Friday. The Egyptian Embassy in Kuwait opened its doors to voters for the third day. There was a high turnout, with voters assembling in long lines before the embassy opened. The embassy increased the number of ballot boxes and employees to meet this high demand, and embassy employees assisted the voters with their paperwork while waiting in line to save time.

“The constitution draws Egypt’s future. It should express all categories of people. It shouldn’t be written by one faction,” said Nesreen Adel, who voted in Kuwait on Friday. She added that what she read about the constitution in the media was not reassuring. “For this, I voted no.”

Another voter, Omar Hamdy, said, “I voted yes for stability and reviving state institutions. What we have disputes on could be amended later after a period of stability and calm.”

Expats in France also entered the third day of voting at the Egyptian Embassy in Paris and the consulate in Marseille. Voting will continue until 15 December from 8 am to 8 pm, Paris time. There are an estimated 5,542 Egyptian citizens based in France.

Both the Egyptian embassy and consulate receive the envelopes containing balloting papers by hand or mail over the four scheduled days of referendum. The counting process will take place at 8 pm on Saturday. Embassies then sends the results to the elections committee at the Foreign Ministry.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm and MENA

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Egyptian expatriates voted in the referendum on the constitution draft for the second day in a row on Thursday.

At least 20,000 Egyptian expatriate cast their ballots in the first day of voting, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Amr Roshdy said.

Egyptian expatriates in the Gulf voted in the highest numbers, with 5,832 voters at the Egyptian Embassy in Kuwait, 3,881 in Riyadh, 3,335 in Jeddah, 2,500 in Doha, 1,844 in Abu Dhabi and 1,390 in Dubai, the ministry reported in a statement released Wednesday.

Roshdy noted that the referendum began Wednesday morning in 128 Egyptian embassies and consulates worldwide, and will continue until Saturday, 15 December. Voters may also cast their ballots by mail.

An estimated 586,000 Egyptian expatriates have the right to vote in the referendum.

The voting began Wednesday in spite of mounting dissent among diplomats over the referendum. Last month, 180 diplomats released a joint statement alleging that the foreign ministry had instructed them to defend President Mohamed Morsy’s controversial constitutional declaration abroad.

Last week, over 200 diplomats, including the ambassadors to Australia, Finland, Spain and Sri Lanka announced they would not supervise the referendum following the deaths of protesters outside the presidential palace on 5 December.

Voting on the constitution draft comes alongside rising polarization between Islamists, who support the document, and the opposition, who argue that the drafting process was hijacked by the Muslim Brotherhood and Salafi movements.    

The poll is scheduled for 15 and 22 December in Egypt, amid a large number of judges refusing to supervise the vote.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

 

 

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Flights between Cairo and Damascus have been suspended for the ninth consecutive day due to the deteriorating security situation around the Damascus International Airport. 

Informed sources at Cairo International Airport said that EgyptAir suspended flights after being informed by its Damascus office manager about the unstable situation around the airport.

However, the Cairo-Aleppo flight left with 20 passengers on board after the security situation in Aleppo was confirmed.

A resumption of flights between Egypt and Syria comes following negotiations among the company and Foreign Ministry, the sources added.

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More than 200 diplomats have said they will not supervise expatriate referendum voting on the draft constitution, which is scheduled to begin Saturday.

Egyptians abroad are supposed to be able to cast ballots for four days in 137 embassies and 11 consulates.

The referendum vote in Egypt is scheduled for 15 December.

Diplomatic officials are boycotting the referendum to remain politically neutral, one diplomat said, and made the joint decision after protesters died Wednesday night in Cairo.

Competing protests of the president's supporters and opponents broke out in violence Wednesday night, injuring hundreds. In recent weeks, President Mohamed Morsy has sparked the unrest by speeding the constitution's completion and issuing a decree expanding his own powers.

"We, the undersigned members of the diplomatic and consular corps, serve our homeland in complete impartiality and without bias to achieve and uphold its interests in the positions of responsibility we assume," read a statement signed by 204 diplomats. "To be consistent with our principles and our loyalty to our country, we denounce each sinful hand that participated directly or indirectly in the bloody events that took place Wednesday and we announce our rejection of the Foreign Ministry's supervision over the constitution draft referendum of expatriate Egyptians because the blood of Egyptians is being shed."

The Egyptian ambassadors to Australia, Finland, Spain and Sri Lanka were among those who signed the statement issued Thursday.

Diplomatic officials also recently expressed discontent about what they said was a political directive from the government urging them to support President Mohamed Morsy's constitutional declaration.

Last year, 245 ambassadors and other consular representatives issued a statement calling on the then-ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Forces to hand over power to civilians.

Despite the most recent declaration, preparations are continuing as normal for voting abroad, according to Assistant Foreign Minister for Consular Affairs Ali al-Ashry. Embassies and consulates will open the voting process on Saturday from 8 am to 8 pm, he said in a statement Thursday. Voting will continue until Tuesday, 11 December, by direct ballot or mail.

The ministry has sent additional representatives to Gulf states, where high turnout is anticipated.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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