Egypt receives first Chinese tourists since COVID-19

China has recently experienced a surge of COVID-19 infections, reporting around 60,000 deaths between Dec. 8 and Jan. 12. (File/AFP)
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Updated 21 January 2023
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Egypt receives first Chinese tourists since COVID-19

  • The Sichuan Airlines arrived at Cairo International Airport with 137 passengers on board

CAIRO: A Chinese flight carrying a group of tourists landed in Cairo on Friday for the first time since the worldwide outbreak of COVID-19, Egyptian media reported.

The Sichuan Airlines arrived at Cairo International Airport from China’s Chengdu city with 137 passengers on board, including 28 tourists.

The move comes a week after China’s Foreign Minister Qin Gang visited Cairo in a multi-leg African tour, where he discussed increasing Chinese tourism to Egypt with his counterpart Sameh Shoukry.

On Friday, Egypt’s Civil Aviation Minister Mohamed Abbas Helmy, and China’s Ambassador to Cairo Liao Liqiang received the tourists.

In a statement, Liqiang thanked Egypt for imposing no travel restrictions on visitors coming from China.
He added that Egypt was among the first countries to receive Chinese tourists since the pandemic, according to Ahram Online.

China has recently experienced a surge of COVID-19 infections, reporting around 60,000 deaths between Dec. 8 and Jan. 12, since a strict zero-Covid policy was earlier lifted.

On Jan. 8, China fully opened its borders with no travel restrictions or quarantine measures for arrivals.

However, several countries, including the US and the UK, have imposed COVID-19 testing on visitors from China due to its virus surge in a move strongly criticized by Beijing.


Iran FM criticizes Israel for ‘doctrine of domination’

Updated 19 min 38 sec ago
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Iran FM criticizes Israel for ‘doctrine of domination’

  • Doctrine allows Israel to expand its military arsenal while pressuring other countries in the region to disarm
  • His remarks came a day after renewed nuclear talks with Washington in Oman

DOHA: Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi on Saturday criticized what he said was a “doctrine of domination” that allows Israel to expand its military arsenal while pressuring other countries in the region to disarm.
His remarks came a day after renewed nuclear talks with Washington, with previous talks collapsing when Israel launched an unprecedented bombing campaign against Iran last June that triggered a 12-day war.
Araghchi was speaking at the Al Jazeera Forum conference in Qatar but made no reference to Friday’s talks with the United States.
“Israel’s expansionist project requires that neighboring countries be weakened: militarily, technologically, economically and socially,” Araghchi said.
“Under this project Israel is free to expand its military arsenal without limits ... Yet other countries are demanded to disarm. Others are pressured to reduce defensive capacity. Others are punished for scientific progress,” he added.
“This is a doctrine of domination.”
During the 12-day war Israel targeted senior Iranian military officials, nuclear scientists and sites as well as residential areas, with the US later launching its own attacks on key nuclear facilities.
Iran responded at the time with drone and missile attacks on Israel, as well as by targeting the largest US military base in the Middle East, located in Qatar.
On Friday, Araghchi led the Iranian delegation in indirect nuclear talks with US Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff in Muscat.
The top Iranian diplomat later described the atmosphere as having been “very positive,” while US President Donald Trump said the talks were “very good,” with both sides agreeing to proceed with further negotiations.
The talks followed threats from Washington and its recent deployment of an aircraft carrier group to the region following Iran’s deadly crackdown on anti-government protests last month.
The United States has sought to address Iran’s ballistic missile program and its support for militant groups in the region — issues which Israel has pushed to include in the talks, according to media reports.
Tehran has repeatedly rejected expanding the scope of negotiations beyond the nuclear issue.