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Tag Archives: Egypt
Mango Season
The competition in the garden escalated unexpectedly this morning. I had thought that the race was between the guards, the part time gardener, us, the bats, and the ants. I was not surprised that the part-time gardener was more attentive … Continue reading
Death on Cairo’s streets
Last night, Adil, the eight-year-old son of Mustafa, the gardener who tends many of the gardens in this neighborhood, was killed by a truck whilst playing in the street outside his home. A quiet serious child with a lovely smile; … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Cairo, child death, Egypt, egyptian roads, traffic accidents
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Road Security, Sinai
We drove from Cairo to St Catherine’s in The Sinai a few days ago and experienced a bit of why the emergency laws are so hated – police checkpoints checked and rechecked our documents and car documents at every town … Continue reading
A Libyan perspective
The revolution is not over in Egypt, and all the objectives are not yet realised and may well not be, but Egyptians are rightly proud of the way that the 25th January revolution was conducted. A foreign news reporter friend … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Benghazi, Egypt, Libya, regime change, Tripoli
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Update: Salim’s life in Egypt
Yesterday I traveled north for 2 ½ hrs to a small village of some 600 souls in the Nile Delta to meet Salim and others who had fled two weeks ago from Tripoli, Libya He tells me that although he … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Egypt, Egyptian village life, remittances, unemployment
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Update on the appeal to food aid at the Salloum Border, Egypt/Libya
The truck with our food aid arrived at the border yesterday midday with 2310 food parcels for the stranded people in no-mans-land. A trip of 400 km from Cairo. In four days, through emails to our social networks which spread … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Egypt, Egyptian Chefs Association, food aid, humanitarian crisis, Libya, World Chefs without Borders
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Egypt/Libya Salloum Border Humanitarian crisis
I was phoned with an update today on the situation on the Egypt/Libyan border at Salloum. “The camp is high up on a cliff with nothing else around. The wind hits you, and it gets miserably cold up there” says … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Egypt, food aid, humanitarian crisis, Libya, refugee camps, Salloum border
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Salim escapes Tripoli
Salim has made it to Egypt from Tripoli. He phoned on Saturday afternoon, it was so good to hear his voice! I was not sure if he was one hour from our home, one hour from the border, or at … Continue reading
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Tagged Egypt, EgyptAir, escape, Tripoli
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Feeding the Exodus at The Salloum Border, Egypt/Libya
There are apparently some 3,500 – 7,000 refugees stranded in camps at the Salloum Egyptian/Libyan border, perhaps waiting for days for transport or travel documents to move on – and it’s cold. Many or most have been robbed of all … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Egypt, food aid, humanitarian crisis, Libya, Salloum border
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Does Egypt have the most dangerous roads in the world?
Egypt’s road accident rate is undeniably awful. Its dismal statistics since last October has included a Boxing day coach crash on the Abu Simbel road into a parked truck carrying sand killed and injured American tourists. On 20th November, eight … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Egypt, Egypt Road Accidents
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