Red Sea shark attacks dominate the conversation in the foreign press
A spate of shark attacks off the Red Sea coast are continuing to make headlines internationally this morning: A Romanian woman became the second person to die after being attacked by a shark in Sahl Hasheesh on Saturday. Her body was found 600 meters away from where a 68-year-old Austrian woman was fatally injured in a separate attack just hours earlier. Beaches in the area have been closed and the Environment Ministry is looking into the attacks. (Reuters | Sky News | Haaretz | The National | Telegraph | New York Post)
Also making headlines:
- Gig workers in Egypt are among many hit by layoffs and surging oil prices around the world. (Thomson Reuters Foundation)
- Two recent high-profile murders of women in Egypt and Jordan are sparking debate over women’s rights in the region. (DW)
- New archaeological discoveries and museums are reviving Egyptomania. (Wall Street Journal)
- Sudanese authorities have extradited 27 men to Egypt for alleged affiliations with the Muslim Brotherhood. (Al Monitor)
- Human rights activist Karim Ennarah cannot join his British wife in the UK due to a travel ban. (Telegraph)
- Environmental activists remain skeptical that Egypt will allow climate protests at COP27 after Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry said that authorities will allow demonstrations in a facility near where the talks will be held. (The Guardian)