Cairo’s international airport was a scene of chaos and confusion on Monday as thousands of foreigners sought to flee the unrest in Egypt, and countries around the world scrambled to send in planes to fly their citizens out.
Nerves frayed and shouting and shoving matches erupted as thousands crammed into Cairo airport’s new Terminal 3 seeking a flight home. The airport’s departures board stopped announcing flight times in an attempt to reduce the tension — but the plan backfired, fuelling passengers’ anger.
Making matters worse, check-in counters were poorly staffed because many EgyptAir employees had been unable to get to work due to a 3pm-to-8am curfew and traffic breakdowns across the Egyptian capital.
“It’s an absolute zoo, what a mess,” said Justine Khanzadian (23) a graduate student from the American University of Cairo. “I decided to leave because of the protests. The government here is just not stable enough to stay.”
Food was scarce at the airport, with people buying up chocolate in the duty free shop. Airport staff shouted at travellers to get in line, but many were in no mood to listen. The scheduling board listed flight numbers without destinations or times of departure.
Occasionally, an official emerged and shouted out the destination of a departing flight, triggering a rush of passengers with boarding passes. The process worked smoothly for nationals of countries that had sent planes — such as Denmark, Germany, China, Canada — but others had no such support.
By curfew time, some people who had apparently failed to get on a flight out of Egypt had boarded buses for the ride back into Cairo.
The US State Department said on Monday it has evacuated more than 1 200 Americans from Egypt aboard government-chartered planes and expects to fly out roughly 1 400 more in the coming days.
Department spokesperson PJ Crowley said that by the end of Monday six planes will have flown nine flights ferrying US citizens from Cairo to Larnaca, Cyprus; Athens, Greece; and Istanbul, Turkey. He said that on Tuesday an additional destination, Frankfurt, Germany, will be added, and that the department plans to add evacuation flights from Aswan and Luxor, Egypt.
In addition to the chartered aircraft, Crowley said a small number of Americans left Egypt on a Canadian evacuation flight and about 70 left on Sunday aboard a US military plane that was bringing in embassy staff.
EgyptAir resumed its flights Monday morning from Cairo after a roughly 14-hour break because of the curfew and its inability to field enough crew. Over 20 hours, only 26 of about 126 EgyptAir flights operated, airport officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to brief the media.
Confusion reigns
Greek oil worker Markos Loukogiannakis, who arrived in Athens on a flight carrying 181 passengers including 65 US citizens, said confusion reigned at Cairo airport and travellers had to negotiate a string of checkpoints just to get there.
“In a 22km route from our suburb to the airport we had to get through 19 checkpoints, including nine manned by civilians,” he said. “There were lots of people gathering at the airport and it was very difficult to get in.”
He said security had deteriorated sharply over the past three days in Cairo after police withdrew from the streets.
“There was a wave of attacks by criminal elements who engaged in burglaries and wrecked shops and banks. There was a lot of shooting and residents took up the burden of protecting their property,” he said.
Jane Travis, an American tourist from Pine Grove, Pennsylvania, who was evacuated to Athens, said she and her husband heard shooting from their hotel.
“We are very concerned that there was no warning from our State Department before we came on this trip,” she said. “From our hotel, which was well guarded, we heard the gunshots and it was very terrifying.”
In a geopolitical shift, even Iraq decided it would evacuate its citizens, sending three planes to Egypt — including the prime minister’s plane – to bring home for free those who wish to return. Thousands of Iraqis had once fled to Egypt to escape the violence in their own country.
About 800 Iraqis had left Cairo by Monday afternoon, said Captain Mohammed al-Moussawi, a crew member for the prime minister’s office. He said the flights would continue until all those who wished to return had done so.
Nearly 320 Indian nationals arrived in Mumbai on a special Air India flight and another 275 were expected later. An Azerbaijan flight carrying 103 people and the body of an Azeri Embassy accountant killed in the unrest arrived in Baku, and Turkey sent six planes to Cairo and Alexandria, evacuating 1 548 Turkish nationals.
Two Americans — Valerie Doescher and Nelson Clark — arrived in Istanbul on Monday aboard a regularly scheduled Turkish Airlines flight and were relieved to be out of Egypt.
Doescher said left after protests near the building where she was interning “grew in a completely exponential way”. Clark said his three-hour drive brought him to an airport that “was a nightmare”.
Indonesia was sending a plane to Cairo to start evacuating some 6 150 Indonesians — mostly students and workers — and SAS Denmark was flying home some 60 Danes.
China sent four planes to help pick up an estimated 500 Chinese stranded in Cairo and warned citizens not travel to Egypt.
Tourist question
That echoed earlier warnings from Britain, Sweden, Finland, Norway, Denmark and the Czech Republic, which all advised against all nonessential travel to Egypt. Many European tour companies canceled trips to Egypt until February 23, while others left the cancellations open until further notice.
One big question was what to do with the tens of thousands of tourists in other parts of Egypt. Tour operators say they will fly home all their customers this week when their holidays end, or on extra flights, stressing there has not been any unrest in Red Sea resort cities like Hurghada or Sharm el-Sheik. Still, food shortages were starting to be felt at some Egyptian resorts and some restaurants were refusing to serve foreigners.
All major German tour operators — among them TUI AG and Thomas Cook’s German subsidiary — cancelled day trips to Cairo and Luxor.
Germany, which sends about 1,2-million tourists to Egypt each year, was not officially evacuating its citizens. But Deutsche Lufthansa AG on Monday was operating an additional flight at the request of the foreign ministry to bring more German tourists home. Foreign ministry spokesperson Dirk Augustin said thousands more Germans currently live in Egypt, with up to 7 000 around Cairo.
Britain estimated there were 30 000 UK tourists and long-term residents in Egypt but said it had no plans to evacuate them. Foreign Secretary William Hague warned people against all but essential travel to Cairo, Alexandria, Luxor and Suez.
German tour operator Rewe Touristik advised clients booked on a holiday in Egypt through February 7 to cancel their trip and allowed them to switch to another destination without surcharge. The company has 3 100 clients in the country.
Many companies organized their own evacuations for their workers. German utility company RWE said its oil and gas subsidiary RWE Dea repatriated some 90 people — employees and their families — with a chartered plane that arrived in Hamburg on Monday.
The Danish company shipping company AP Moller-Maersk A/S chartered a plane to pick up relatives of its Danish employees in Egypt. The company said there were no terminal operations in Egypt on Monday and the Maersk Line, Safmarine and Damco offices were closed.
Air France cancelled its daily flight from Paris to Cairo on Monday and planned to increase its capacity Tuesday by an extra 200 seats.
Portugal sent a C-130 military transport plane to evacuate its citizens. Greece was sending three C-130 military transport planes to Alexandria on Tuesday and Polish airline LOT was flying to Cairo. – Sapa-AP