American researcher banned from entering Egypt had no visa – foreign ministry

Sunday 14-12-2014 07:04 PM
American researcher banned from entering Egypt had no visa – foreign ministry

Michele Dunne. Photo from the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace website

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CAIRO, Dec 14 (Aswat Masriya) – Egypt’s ministry of foreign affairs questioned on Sunday the "allegations" pressed by an American researcher regarding her ban from entering the country, accusing her of failing to secure a visa before her arrival.

Michele Dunne, Senior Associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (CEIP) and former United States diplomat, arrived to Cairo from Istanbul on Friday, before she was forced to exit the country.

Airport security sources said Egypt’s Homeland Security (formerly known as State Security) had put Dunne on an entry ban list.

The foreign ministry nevertheless said in a statement that Dunne had applied for a visa back at the Egyptian Embassy in Washington, yet she withdrew her application before receiving the visa.

The ministry added that only tourism visas to Egypt could be instantly acquired upon the visitors’ arrival at the airport, stressing that Dunne did not need a tourism visa.

“Does the U.S. allow foreigners into its lands without acquiring an entry visa from a U.S. embassy first?” the ministry questioned.

Dunne was travelling to Cairo to attend a conference of the Egyptian Council of Foreign Affairs.

She is known to be a critic of the Egyptian regime which took charge since the military ouster of Islamist President Mohamed Mursi in July 2013, following mass protests against his rule.

After being denied entry into Egypt, the researcher said on her twitter account: "some Egyptians complain I don't listen enough to pro-government views. When I accept invitations to conferences of pro-government groups, they deny me entry. Go figure."

Dunne works at the CEIP's Middle East programme. She is an expert on political and economic change in Arab countries, especially in Egypt.

The researcher told Reuters on Saturday that she has been visiting Egypt "two to four times a year, for the past 10 years at least.

"I don’t think there's been anything really different on my part," Dunne told Reuters. "It seems to me the change is more on the Egyptian side. It seems the tolerance for any kind of writing that is critical is much less than it was before."

The CEIP is a Washington-based international affairs think tank.

On August 11, Human Rights Watch Executive Director Kenneth Roth and Middle East and North Africa Director Sarah Leah Whitson were denied entry at the Cairo International Airport and forced to fly back.

Egypt's Ministry of Interior had claimed then that the HRW delegation did not secure an entry visa into Egypt.

Roth and Whitson were travelling to Cairo to attend the release of a report by the international watchdog on the violent dispersal of two pro-Mursi encampments in August, 2013, which left hundreds of protesters killed.

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