10 killed in Egypt as minibus plunges off ferry into Nile

Rescuers work to pull a sunken minibus from a canal of the Nile River in Egypt’s Giza governorate on Tuesday. (AFP)
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Updated 21 May 2024
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10 killed in Egypt as minibus plunges off ferry into Nile

  • Al-Ahram newspaper said the driver, who had released the handbrake, was arrested while trying to flee

CAIRO: At least 10 female farm workers died in Egypt when a minibus plunged off a river ferry and into the Nile northwest of Cairo on Tuesday, the Health Ministry said.

“The toll is at 10 and could rise,” ministry spokesman Hossam Abdelghaffar told AFP.

The state’s flagship Al-Ahram newspaper reported the accident earlier and said the driver, who had released the handbrake, was arrested while trying to flee.

He had gotten into “a verbal argument” with one of the passengers before leaving the vehicle, it reported.

The vehicle sank in the village of Abu Ghalib, about 50 kilometers (31 miles) northwest of the capital.

Nine more passengers had been transported to nearby hospitals to receive treatment for their injuries, the Health Ministry said in a statement.

Egypt’s Labor Minister Hassan Shehata said the minibus was transporting “girls working on a farm,” but did not specify whether they were minors.

The Ministry of Social Solidarity said it would disburse financial compensation “to the families of the deceased and injured.”

Following an initial investigation at the scene, the public prosecutor’s office ordered a technical inspection of the vehicle to determine “the reasons it had plunged into the water,” Al-Ahram reported.

Commuter accidents are common in Egypt, especially in agricultural areas along the Nile and its streams, where small, overloaded boats ferry farmers and workers back and forth.


RSF committed atrocities during El-Fasher capture, UN body says

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RSF committed atrocities during El-Fasher capture, UN body says

  • UN Human Rights Office documented more than 6,000 killings in ‌the first ‌three days of the October offensive
Rapid Support Forces violations in Sudan during the capture of the city of El-Fasher amount to war crimes and possible crimes against humanity, the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights said ‌on Friday.
Darfur’s El-Fasher fell ‌to RSF forces ​in ‌October ⁠2025 ​after a long ⁠siege that led to mass killings.
Based on interviews with over 140 victims and witnesses conducted in Sudan’s Northern state and in eastern Chad in late 2025, the UN Human Rights Office ⁠documented more than 6,000 killings in ‌the first ‌three days of the ​RSF offensive on El-Fasher ‌after the siege, it said.
RSF committed “widespread ‌atrocities that amount to war crimes and possible crimes against humanity,” said a report published by the Human Rights Office.
UN Human ‌Rights Chief Volker Turk renewed his call on parties to the ⁠conflict ⁠to take effective steps to end the grave violations by forces under their command, he said in a statement.
He appealed to states with influence to act urgently to prevent the repetition of violations documented in El-Fasher. “This includes respecting the arms embargo already in place, and ending the supply, sale or ​transfer of ​arms or military material to the parties.”