183 Egyptians cross from Libya into Tunisia - TAP

Friday 20-02-2015 05:56 PM
183 Egyptians cross from Libya into Tunisia - TAP

Egyptian men wait to board their plane to return home, at the Gabes Matmata airport, south of Tunisia August 6, 2014.REUTERS/Stringer

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CAIRO, Feb 20 (Aswat Masriya) - Around 183 Egyptians have crossed from conflict-torn Libya into Tunisia through Ras Jedir checkpoint on the Libyan-Tunisian borders, Tunisian news agency TAP reported on Friday.

TAP has not provided details on the dates of flights carrying Egyptians back home.

Aviation Minister Hossam Kamal told Aswat Masriya on Monday that Egyptians in Libya will cross into Tunisia using buses before they get flown back home. He said there is a difficulty in evacuating them using Libyan airports, citing the "deteriorating security situation" there.

Twenty Coptic Egyptians were abducted in the Libyan city of Sirte on two separate occasions in December and January, only one week apart. They were beheaded in a video released late Sunday titled "a message signed with blood to the nation of the cross."

Egypt has launched airstrikes in Libya on Monday in response to the beheadings. The Egyptian military said in a statement the strikes targeted training sites and weapons and ammunition storage sites belonging to Islamic State fighters in Iraq and Syria, located inside Libya. 

The Aviation Ministry created an emergency airlift with Tunisia last July to transport Egyptians stranded on the Libyan borders with Tunisia back home.

Abu Bakr al-Gendy, the director of the Central Agency for Public Mobilisation and Statistics (CAPMAS), said that the agency has no official count of Egyptians residing in Libya. He added during a press conference on Monday that a large number of Egyptian nationals in Libya enter the neighbouring country through "illegitimate means" and that the Libyan authorities do not count foreign workers on its lands.

Gendy estimated the number of Egyptian workers currently in Libya to be between 200 and 250 thousand, yet stressed there are no official figures to confirm this.

Mahmoud al-Zanati, head of Egypt's Civil Aviation Authority, said on Monday that civil aviation between Egypt and Libya is only operating in the direction of return to Egypt.

Egyptian security authorities had issued a ban on any travel to Libya on January 20, reported state-run news agency MENA.

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