Yahoo – AFP,
June 14, 2017
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| The deal to hand over the Red Sea islands of Tiran (foreground) and Sanafir (background) to Saudi Arabia provoked accusations that Cairo had "sold" the strategic islands (AFP Photo/STRINGER) |
Cairo (AFP)
- Egypt's parliament approved on Wednesday a controversial maritime agreement
with Saudi Arabia that transfers two Red Sea islands to the kingdom, state
television and a lawmaker said.
The deal,
which is still under challenge in court, had sparked rare protests in the
country with the opposition accusing the government of selling Egyptian
territory to its Saudi benefactors.
The vote
came after days of heated debate in parliament with opponents even interrupting
one committee session with chanting.
Courts had
struck down the agreement, signed in April 2016, but a year later another court
upheld it.
Lawyers are
now challenging the deal before the constitutional court.
The accord
had sparked rare protests in Egypt last year, with President Abdel Fattah
al-Sisi accused of having traded the islands of Tiran and Sanafir for Saudi
largesse.
The
government has said the islands were Saudi to begin with, but were leased to
Egypt in the 1950s.
Opponents
of the agreement insist that Tiran and Sanafir are Egyptian.
On Tuesday
evening dozens of journalists protested against the agreement in central Cairo,
before being dispersed by police, journalists' union official Gamal Abdel Rehim
told AFP.
Several
were briefly arrested before being released but "three reporters are still
detained, and contacts are being made with the interior ministry to get them
released," he said.

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