Egyptians fired up after Burger King exploits Suez Canal crisis

Burger King Global CMO Fernando Machado shared the ad on Twitter and wrote, “Great post from Burger King Chile” accompanied by a laughing emoji. (Screenshot/Twitter)
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Updated 30 March 2021
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Egyptians fired up after Burger King exploits Suez Canal crisis

  • Fast-food burger brand uses maritime trade blockage to promote sandwich while #BoycottBurgerKing starts on social media

CAIRO: Egyptian social media users launched the hashtag #BoycottBurgerKing after the fast-food restaurant chain promoted a sandwich on Twitter by using an aerial photo of the Suez Canal blockage. 

In the advertisement, Burger King Chile superimposed the image of a Double Whopper sandwich in place of the 430-yard Ever Given cargo ship, which was grounded in the Suez Canal and halted maritime trade in the region for almost a week.

The container carrier hit the eastern bank of the narrow shipping lane March 23 and became wedged diagonally across its span. Shipping convoys through the canal resumed on Monday evening after tugs finally pulled the Ever Given free.

Burger King Global CMO Fernando Machado shared the ad on Twitter and wrote, “Great post from Burger King Chile” accompanied by a laughing emoji. 

Many Egyptian social-media users did not find it funny.

“The Burger King in Chile took advantage of the global trend of the ship and they suggested their sandwich was as big as the ship that got stuck in the Suez Canal,” Sameh Al-Rifai wrote on Twitter. 

Social-media users described the ad as “bad manners of the company” and urged other users to boycott Burger King restaurants and products.

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“A call to every honorable Egyptian, a call to all Arab brothers, a call to everyone who loves Egypt — Boycott the Burger King chain,” Muhammad Shaalan tweeted.

During the blockage crisis, Egyptians were worried because maritime navigation in the Suez Canal stopped for six days as other ships backed up for miles in both directions. The canal links the Mediterranean with the Red Sea, through which more than 10 percent of global maritime trade passes through. 

“Mocking others' crises is a psychological issue, apart from the restaurant,” activist Muhammad Rashid wrote on Twitter while using the hashtag.

#BoycottBurgerKing attracted thousands of tweets, all of which included strong criticism of the company and explicit calls for an inclusive boycott.

“The disaster is that you now mean nothing for the people who rely on fast food,” another social-media user wrote.

However, there was another group of Twitterati who saw nothing wrong with the Burger King ad and considered it a smart way of riding the wave of the crisis.

But this is not the first time Burger King has found itself on the griddle and getting burnt over an offensive tongue-in-cheek tweet.

Three weeks ago on International Women’s Day, a tweet from Burger King UK read: “Women belong in the kitchen” and it backfired massively on the fast-food burger brand.

While the thread was meant to reference the male-dominated UK kitchens and attempt to help women break through by awarding culinary scholarships, the chain deleted the tweet and issued an apology instead.


Independent Arabia celebrates 7th anniversary with global journalism awards

Updated 26 January 2026
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Independent Arabia celebrates 7th anniversary with global journalism awards

  • Journalist Aya Mansour received the Kurt Schork International Journalism Award for her rigorous investigative reporting from Iraq on highly sensitive issues
  • ‘SRMG’s support enabled us to reach and connect with massive readership – These awards belong to every journalist:’ Editor-in-Chief Ahdwan Al-Ahmari

LONDON: Independent Arabia on Saturday marked seven years since its launch as a platform for “distinctive content and a bold editorial vision,” having made history as the first Arabic digital outlet to secure licensing rights from an international publication, London-based newspaper The Independent.

Over this seven-year period, the news platform has established itself as a meaningful force within Arab media institutions through political, economic, cultural, and lifestyle coverage that reimagines news delivery and journalistic purpose. By innovating content presentation and format, it has tangibly contributed to reshaping Arabic digital journalism’s landscape.

Recalling the 2019 founding, Editor-in-Chief Ahdwan Al-Ahmari said: “Our fundamental objective was connecting with the widest possible Arab readership. SRMG’s backing enabled us to achieve substantial audience reach through correspondents positioned throughout the Arab region and internationally.”

Since its launch, Independent Arabia has won 11 awards. Its latest came in January 2025 when staff journalist Aya Mansour received the 24th Kurt Schork International Journalism Award in the Local Reporter category for her rigorous investigative reporting from Iraq on highly sensitive issues.

Al-Ahmari dedicated the accolade to every Independent Arabia journalist and media professionals across the Arab world, “particularly our colleagues lost in Yemen and Palestine. I specifically honor Maryam Abu Daqqa, our journalist colleague killed while documenting Gaza’s reality through photography—posthumously recognized at the highest level in Vienna by the International Press Institute with the ‘World Press Freedom Hero’ award.”

“Our initial tagline was ‘Independent Enriches You,’” Al-Ahmari recalled. “As our understanding matured, we recognized that ‘we lie in the details’—prompting the change. Within news media, particularly across SRMG’s distinguished portfolio, integrated coverage matters most. The real competitive edge comes from delivering analytical depth unique to each publication.”

Observing this seventh anniversary milestone, Al-Ahmari expressed appreciation for “everyone contributing publicly and behind the scenes—designers, correspondents, editors, administrative teams—every individual whose dedication keeps us leading the field.”