Gold smuggler thwarted at Cairo international airport

Security officers check passengers at the new Sphinx International Airport in west Cairo, Egypt January 26, 2019. (REUTERS)
Short Url
Updated 12 December 2022
Follow

Gold smuggler thwarted at Cairo international airport

  • Egyptian citizen had 5 bars hidden in his clothes
  • Had arrived home on a flight from Kuwait

CAIRO: Customs officials at Cairo International Airport have thwarted an attempt by an Egyptian passenger to smuggle five gold bars into the country.

An official at the arrivals hall stopped the passenger and had him searched as he was acting suspiciously, and because he had only planned to stay for two days in the country. An initial search of his bags revealed no banned or restricted goods. He had arrived on a Jazeera Airways flight.

When a further search was carried out, five gold bars were found hidden in his clothing. A seizure report No. 164 of 2022 was filed by the director general of customs to seize the items and launch legal action against the citizen.

Meanwhile, in two separate incidents, customs officials at the airport had also prevented attempts to smuggle cosmetics and mobile phones into the country by passengers who had arrived from Italy and the UAE.

In the first case, a customs officer spotted in the x-ray scanner goods that looked suspicious in the bags of a male passenger arriving from Bergamo Airport on an Air Arabia flight. A total of 255 packages of various cosmetics were found.

In the second case, a woman arriving from Sharjah was found with 35 phones, manufactured by a well-known US company, under her clothes.

Legal action has been taken against both passengers.

 

 

 


Latest US sanctions target Houthi funding networks, Treasury says

Updated 6 sec ago
Follow

Latest US sanctions target Houthi funding networks, Treasury says

  • Since 2023, ⁠the Houthis have launched numerous assaults on vessels in the Red Sea that they deem to be linked with Israel

WASHINGTON: The Trump administration issued fresh sanctions on Friday further targeting the Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen ​and the transfer of oil products, weapons and other so-called dual-use equipment that it said helped fund the group.

The action targets 21 individuals and entities as well as one vessel, including some ‌alleged front ‌companies in Yemen, ‌Oman and ⁠the ​UAE, the US Department of Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control said in a statement.

“The Houthis threaten the United States by committing acts of terror and attacking commercial ⁠vessels transiting the Red Sea,” US Treasury ‌Secretary Scott Bessent said ‍in the statement.

The move ‍builds on previous Treasury action ‍to pressure the Houthis “vast revenue generation and smuggling networks, which enable the group to sustain its capability to conduct destabilizing ​regional activities,” including the Red Sea attacks, the department added.

Since 2023, ⁠the Houthis have launched numerous assaults on vessels in the Red Sea that they deem to be linked with Israel in what they say is solidarity with Palestinians over Israel’s war on Gaza.

Tehran’s regional sway has been weakened by Israel’s attacks on its proxies, including on ‌the Houthis in Yemen. (Reporting by Susan Heavey and Daphen Psaledakis; Editing ‌by Chizu Nomiyama )