15-06-2025
CAIRO/ TRIPOLI: Authorities in both Egypt and Libya have stopped activists seeking to break Israel’s blockade on Gaza, protest organizers have said, with reports of more detentions and deportations taking place.
“Forty participants of the Global March to Gaza have had their passports taken at a checkpoint on the way out of Cairo,” the organizers of the Global March to Gaza said in a statement on Friday.
“They are being held in the heat and not allowed to move,” they continued, adding that another “15 are being held at hotels”.
The activists are from France, Spain, Canada, Turkiye and the United Kingdom, it said, adding, “We are a peaceful movement and we are complying with Egyptian law.”
The group urged embassies to help secure their release so they could complete their voyage.
Activists arrived in Egypt this week for the Global March to Gaza, a grassroots initiative aiming to pressure Israel to allow the delivery of aid and humanitarian supplies to Gaza’s starving population.
Organizers said that participants from 80 countries were set to begin their march towards Egypt’s Rafah crossing with Gaza, with about 4,000 activists expected to take part.
The overland protest was to coincide with other solidarity efforts, including a boat carrying aid and activists that was intercepted by the Israeli military earlier this week as it attempted to reach Gaza.
Detentions and deportations
According to plans outlined by organizers, participants were to travel by bus to El Arish, a city in the heavily securitized Sinai Peninsula, before walking the final 50km (30 miles) to Rafah. Protesters intended to camp near the border before returning to Cairo on June 19.
However, Egyptian police stopped several groups of foreign nationals en route, forcing vehicles to pull over roughly 30km (20 miles) from Ismailia, just outside the Sinai. Activists said police ordered passengers with non-Egyptian passports to disembark, blocking their passage to Rafah.
Paul Murphy, an independent Irish member of parliament, who has travelled to Egypt to take part, said in a post on social media, “We have had our passports confiscated and are being detained. It seems Egyptian authorities have decided to crack down on the Great March to Gaza.”
Mo, a member of the protest march from the Netherlands, said that his group had headed in taxis to Ismailia, but that at a checkpoint near the city foreigners were told to hand over their passports, with only Egyptians allowed through. He also described riot police who came to clear the road of protesters.
Now back in Cairo, Mo and the group from the Netherlands are deciding what to do next.
“We are trying to regroup,” he told media. “A lot of our group is splintered, some have been beaten up by the police… so they’re coming back battered and bruised and broken.”
“It seems like the Egyptian authorities are determined to stop us from reaching anywhere near the border.”
Security sources told media that at least 88 individuals had been detained or deported from Cairo airport and other locations across the country. (Int’l Monitoring Desk)