Drawing for one of the Egyptian rebels on the walls
An American woman banned from leaving Egypt as part of its crackdown on foreign-funded pro-democracy groups was stopped from boarding an international flight on Thursday, Cairo
airport officials said.
The officials said Mary Elizabeth Whitehead was trying to board a flight to Germany minutes before takeoff, when airport security stopped her. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity in line with police regulations.
The spat over the non-government groups has caused the deepest crisis in Washington's relations with Cairo in decades, particularly after strong ties under ousted leader Hosni Mubarak's nearly 30-year-long rule.
According to the security officials, Whitehead was listed among seven Americans who are barred from travel by Egypt's attorney general. Some have sought refuge at the American Embassy in Cairo, including the son of US Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood, who heads the International Republican Institute's office in Egypt.
An American official said, however, that Washington understands that Whitehead was not among the Americans on a no-travel ban, and that she also was not among those charged with wrongdoing. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because efforts are ongoing, said the US was speaking with Egyptian authorities to figure out why she was prevented from travelling.
The US State Department says there are a total of 16 Americans facing trial. Egypt's state news agency says, however, that 19 Americans are facing trial on charges that include the illegal use of foreign funds and operating offices without licenses.
American officials have threatened to cut USD 1.5 billion in annual aid to Egypt over the NGO crisis.
Egyptian authorities have responded by blasting what they call US meddling in the country's legal and internal affairs.
Egypt's Foreign Minister Mohammed Amr said on Thursday the case has nothing to do with the government and is in the judiciary's hands.
"It is being dealt with legally and it is not for the Egyptian government to get involved in the judicial process," he said, adding that US aid to Egypt was not without mutual interest.
Local rights groups and US officials, meanwhile, have blasted the NGO case as politically motivated. Egypt's military rulers, facing criticism for their handling of the country's transition since Mubarak's toppling, have accused protesters and "foreign hands" of seeking to create chaos and instability in the country.
The trial of the Americans and others, which is set to start on February 26, involves 43 defendants, including Germans, Palestinians and Jordanians. The Americans work for four US-based groups: the International Republican Institute, the National Democratic Institute, Freedom House and a group that trains journalists.
President Barack Obama has urged Egypt's military rulers to drop the investigation, and high-level officials, including Republican Senator John McCain, have flown in to Cairo to seek a solution.
McCain, who chairs the IRI and is the highest ranking Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee, said in Cairo earlier this week that US threats to cut aid may be counterproductive. The aid is linked to Egypt's 1979 peace treaty with Israel, a cornerstone of US foreign policy in the Mideast. After meeting with military ruler Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, McCain said he was given assurances that Egyptian leaders were working "very diligently" to try to resolve the NGO issue.
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All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
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