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Mayor Adams bizarrely invokes ‘Mein Kampf,' takes vicious dig at Dem rival in defiant message refusing to step down

Mayor Adams bizarrely invokes ‘Mein Kampf,' takes vicious dig at Dem rival in defiant message refusing to step down

Yahoo18-02-2025

Mayor Eric Adams bizarrely invoked 'Mein Kampf' at a Brooklyn church rally Monday afternoon as he defiantly blasted rivals calling for him to step down — as chaos swirled around the administration.
Adams — who delivered the speech to a group of about 50 supporters at the Rehoboth Cathedral on MacDougal Street — also took a vicious dig at public advocate and potential successor Jumaane Williams, who would take over as mayor if the embattled, indicted Adams abdicated his office.
'I still don't know what he does, because it's hard to really serve the city when you wake up at noon,' Hizzoner said of Williams.
'If I step down, the public advocate becomes the mayor. So can you imagine turning the city over to him? That is the top reason not to step down.
'When you don't have a job, you can go all over the city throwing rocks,' he continued. 'I love this city too much to watch him become mayor.'
The speech came at an event attended by clergy members who offered words of support for the mayor and even prayed around him.
During his remarks, Adams also claimed he once heard Martin Luther King, Jr. recite a quote from Hitler's infamous Nazi manifesto, 'Mein Kampf,' that went something like, 'If you tell a lie long enough, loud enough, people will tend to believe it's true.'
'And that's what you're seeing right there, right now: A modern-day 'Mein Kampf,'' Adams told his supporters, appearing to imply he was being persecuted by liars.
The apocryphal quote — which has many variations — is not from the book and is most often attributed to Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels, not Hitler.
Still, Adams launched into a lengthy diatribe in which he defended his mayoral record against attacks on his handling of the city's migrant crisis, among other things.
'I slept in a homeless shelter with my migrant, asylum-seeker brothers and sisters and talked with them on the ground,' Hizzoner said. 'Now they have a loud voice yelling at me — where were you when I was going to Washington, DC, fighting for the people of the city?'
He also appeared frustrated with his predicament, which includes a litany of legal troubles and political potholes.
'When we talk about taking homeless off our streets so we won't have encampments, they protested me,' he said. 'When we talk about taking guns off our streets by having our gun units in place, they protested me. When we talk about changing and building new small businesses, they protested me.
'When we talk about putting police officers on a train to make our streets safe, they protested me,' he went on. 'When we talked about mental health issues and crises to prevent people from living in that condition, they protested me.
'All they know how to do is protest.'
Most of Adams' problems stem from his legal issues, which began when the 64-year-old mayor pleaded not guilty to charges that he fast-tracked the opening of the Turkish Consulate in Manhattan in exchange for $123,000 worth of bribes — and sought illegal donations from Turks who poured tens of thousands of dollars in cash into his 2021 campaign.
But the Trump administration — which Adams has cozied up to — and its Justice Department has ordered Manhattan federal prosecutors to drop the historic corruption case because the feds now claim it was politically motivated.
Manhattan's top federal prosecutor, Danielle Sassoon, quit in protest over the Justice Department's decree, and wrote in a scathing resignation letter that nixing the charges amounted to a 'quid pro quo' meant to force the now-indebted mayor to comply with Trump's hardline immigration policy.
But even if the legal case against him dissolves, his political troubles endure.
At least 30 local Democratic leaders have already called on Adams to abandon his post, including high-ranking pols in the New York State Senate.
But Adams is stubbornly clinging to his office, and told a Queens congregation on Sunday that he's on a mission from God and isn't going anywhere.
But several of his deputies are — sources told The Post that deputy mayors Maria Torres Springer, Meera Joshi, Anne Williams Isom and Chauncey Parker stepped down in the wake of the Justice Department's controversial, case-tossing move.
The administration scrambled over the weekend to convince the four to stay quiet about — or at least delay — their plans to punch out.
The deputies resigned Monday.
The same day, City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams threw her weight behind the resignation drive, saying it's 'clear that Mayor Adams has now lost the confidence and trust of his own staff, his colleagues in government, and New Yorkers.'
'He now must prioritize New York City and New Yorkers, step aside and resign,' she said. 'This administration no longer has the ability to effectively govern with Eric Adams as mayor … there is too much at stake for our city and New Yorkers to allow this to continue. '
'We have endured enough scandal, selfishness and embarrassment, all of which distract from the leadership that New Yorkers deserve,' she continued.
'This is the opposite of public service.'

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The Latest: Israel threatens more attacks on Iran after Tehran retaliates with missile strikes
The Latest: Israel threatens more attacks on Iran after Tehran retaliates with missile strikes

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

The Latest: Israel threatens more attacks on Iran after Tehran retaliates with missile strikes

Israel warned of more attacks on Iran on Saturday after Tehran fired waves of missiles and drones that killed three people and wounded dozens in Israel. Iran was retaliating for a series of blistering Israeli attacks on its nuclear and military facilities on Friday. Israel said hundreds of airstrikes over the past two days also killed nine senior scientists and experts involved in Iran's nuclear program, in addition to several top generals. Iran's U.N. ambassador said 78 people were killed and more than 320 wounded. The U.S. and Iran had been scheduled to hold their sixth round of indirect talks over Iran's nuclear program on Sunday in Oman, but Oman's foreign minister said that meeting will not now take place after Israel's strikes on Iran. ___ Here's the latest: Leaders of Egypt and Turkey say Israel risks pushing Mideast into 'full-fledged chaos' The leaders of Egypt and Turkey on Saturday warned that Israel's 'escalatory approach' risks plunging the entire Middle East into a 'full-fledged chaos.' A statement from the Egyptian presidency said President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi and his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan stressed in a phone call that Israel's attacks on Iran could lead to 'catastrophic repercussions' in the region. They called for an immediate cessation of military operations and a return to the Omani-mediated nuclear talks between the United States and Iran. Israeli drone strikes a refinery in Iran's South Pars gas field, semiofficial news agencies say An Israeli drone struck a refinery in Iran's South Pars gas field Saturday, semiofficial Iranian news agencies reported. If confirmed, it would mark the first Israeli attack on Iran's oil and natural gas industry. Israel did not immediately acknowledge attacking the field, but such sites do have air defense systems around them, which Israel has been targeting since Friday. The Fars and Tasnim news agencies both reported the strike, saying it happened in Phase 14 of the field. Iran shares the gas field, which stretches across the Persian Gulf, with Qatar. Oman says US-Iran talks over Tehran's nuclear program 'will not now take place' Oman's foreign minister says planned talks between Iran and the United States over Tehran's rapidly advancing nuclear program 'will not now take place' after Israel's strikes targeting the Islamic Republic. Badr al-Busaidi made the announcement on social media Saturday. It comes after Iran's foreign minister said any talks would be 'unjustifiable' amid the ongoing attacks. Oman has been mediating the talks. 'The Iran-U.S. talks scheduled to be held in Muscat this Sunday will not now take place,' al-Busaidi wrote. 'But diplomacy and dialogue remain the only pathway to lasting peace.' A sixth round was due to happen in Muscat, Oman's capital, before the Israeli strikes began Friday. Russia offers to assist in de-escalating tensions Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, in a phone call with his Iranian counterpart Abbas Araghchi, reaffirmed Moscow's readiness to help resolve issues surrounding Iran's nuclear program and to assist in de-escalating tensions between Iran and Israel. The Russian Foreign Ministry said the conversation, initiated by the Iranian side, followed a call Friday between Presidents Vladimir Putin and Masoud Pezeshkian. The ministry said Russia reiterated its condemnation of Israel's military actions against Iran, calling them a violation of the U.N. charter and international law. The Israeli military says its strikes on Tehran were deepest ever Israeli warplanes hit more than 400 targets across Iran in the past 24 hours as part of Operation 'Rising Lion,' including dozens of missile sites and air defense systems in Tehran, the military said. Separately, it said over 20 senior Iranian commanders were eliminated, including top intelligence and missile officials. Israeli army spokesperson Effie Defrin said the road to Tehran was now 'open,' calling the strikes the deepest ever carried out by the Israeli Air Force. Britain's prime minister and Saudi crown prince call for a de-escalation Keir Starmer and Mohammed bin Salman spoke on Saturday about the "gravely concerning situation in the Middle East and agreed on the need to de-escalate,'' Downing Street Office said in a statement. The United Kingdom is "poised to work closely with its allies in the coming days to support a diplomatic resolution,' it said. Egypt pushes back the opening of its new museum, blames Israel-Iran conflict The Grand Egyptian Museum will open later this year because of the Israeli-Iranian escalation, authorities said Saturday. The mega-project near the famed Giza Pyramids was sent to open on July 3. The Tourism and Antiquities Ministry said the opening was moved to the fourth quarter of 2025, without giving a date and citing ongoing regional developments. The museum has been under construction for about two decades. Some sections have been open since 2022 for limited tours. However its overall opening has been repeatedly delayed, including because of the coronavirus pandemic. Iran's Natanz nuclear facility suffered huge damage, satellite images show The images show multiple buildings either damaged or destroyed, including structures experts say supply power to the facility. The images were shot on Saturday by Planet Labs PBC and analyzed by The Associated Press. Natanz's enrichment plant — where Iran enriched uranium to 60% purity, a short, technical step away from weapons-grade levels of 90% — was also destroyed. All the Natanz facilities damaged in Israeli strikes are above ground and it doesn't appear from the images that below-ground enrichment halls had any apparent damage, though they likely are without electricity. No nuclear talks with US this weekend, signals Iran's foreign minister Abbas Araghchi says nuclear talks with the United States would be 'unjustifiable' after Israeli strikes on his country — an indication there would be no negotiations this weekend. The U.S. and Iran teams were to hold talks in Oman on Sunday. Araghchi spoke in a phone call with Kaja Kallas, the European Union's top diplomat. Israeli airstrikes were the 'result of the direct support by Washington,' he alleged, according to the state-run IRNA news agency. The U.S. has said it is not part of the strikes. The 'continuation of the indirect talks between Iran and the U.S. is unjustifiable in a situation where the wildness by the Zionist regime continues,' he added. There was no immediate reaction from the White House. Egypt's top diplomat says Israeli strikes on Iran can push the region into 'chaos' Egypt's Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty denounced Israel's strikes on Iran as a 'serious escalation' that could push the region to 'a state of instability and chaos.' Abdelatty's comments came in phone calls with his Italian and Spanish counterparts, the Egyptian foreign ministry said in a statement. Iranian media report more Israeli strikes Footage shared by an affiliate of Iran's state TV showed a fire after an Israeli strike at Zagros Khodro, a former car manufacturing plant in Borujerd. The state-run IRNA news agency also reported an Israeli strike on Saturday around Abadan in Iran's southwestern Khuzestan province. Other strikes appeared to be happening in Kermanshah near a military barracks. Israel gives first report of wounded soldiers The Israeli military says seven soldiers were lightly wounded on Friday night in an Iranian missile strike in central Israel. It says they were briefly hospitalized and sent home. This is the first report of military casualties in the operation. It gave no further details on where the soldiers were located. Iran's supreme leader names new head of the Revolutionary Guard's aerospace division Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has appointed Gen. Majid Mousavi, to replace Gen. Amir Ali Hajizadeh, who was killed in an Israeli airstrike on Friday. The Guard's aerospace division oversees Iran's arsenal of ballistic missiles. Israel's main international airport will stay closed The airport authority says the it will stay closed until further notice. Ben Gurion International Airport near Tel Aviv has been closed to traffic since Israel attacked Iran's military and nuclear facilities on Friday morning and Iran retaliated with missile and drone strikes at Israel. The announcement came as Lebanon, Jordan and Syria said they were reopening their airspaces on Saturday after closing them. The pope appeals on Israel and Iran to show responsibility and act reasonably It was one of the strongest appeals for peace since the election in early May of the first American pontiff. 'The situation in Iran and Israel has seriously deteriorated,' Pope Leo XIV said during an audience in St. Peter's Basilica. He stressed that 'the commitment to building a safer world free from the nuclear threat must be pursued through respectful encounters and sincere dialogue to build a lasting peace.' Leo also noted that 'no one should ever threaten the existence of another.' Israel's defense minister says 'Tehran will burn' if it continues firing missiles Defense Minister Israel Katz issued the stark warning after an assessment meeting with the army's chief of staff. He says Iran will pay a heavy price for harming Israeli citizens. Israel's military threatens more strikes on targets in Iranian capital The Israeli military said around noon on Saturday that its fighter jets 'were set to resume striking targets in Tehran.' Meanwhile, the U.N. nuclear watchdog — the International Atomic Energy Agency — confirmed in a post on X that the Isfahan nuclear site in Iran was targeted several times on Friday. 'No increase in off-site radiation levels has been reported as of now,' the agency said. Syria also opens its airspace after the Israel-Iran deadly attacks Syria's civil aviation authority says it's reopening the airspace on Saturday but will follow the situation in the region and take any necessary measures if needed. The airspace was closed on Friday. National carrier Syrian Air also said it is resuming some of its flights. Iran confirms 2 more high-ranking generals were killed in Israeli strikes Iranian state television identified the two killed as Gen. Gholamreza Mehrabi, the deputy of intelligence for the armed forces' general staff, and Gen. Mehdi Rabbani, the deputy of operations. It did not say where the men were killed. Israel's strikes on Friday killed multiple high-ranking officers within Iran's armed forces, including the chief of staff of the army and the head of Iran's paramilitary Revolutionary Guard. 3 injured in Jordan by unspecified falling object during Israel-Iran attacks Three people were wounded in Jordan's northern city of Irbid when an object fell on a home, state media reported Saturday. They were taken to a hospital and are in stable condition, the Jordan News Agency said. The report did not specify what the object was, but Iranian missiles and drones fired toward Israel flew over Jordan. Jordanian authorities have begun an investigation, the report said. Lebanon reopens its airspace after exchange of fire between Israel and Iran Lebanon reopened its airspace on Saturday morning, hours after closing it due to the exchange of fire between Israel and Iran. Lebanon's Ministry of Public Works and Transport apologized to passengers whose flights were delayed, saying it had closed the airspace late Friday for the safety of travelers. The airspace was reopened at 10 a.m. (0700 GMT) on Saturday. Satellite images confirm damage to Iran's ballistic missile arsenal Satellite images analyzed Saturday by The Associated Press began to confirm some of the damage sustained by Iran's ballistic missile arsenal by the Israeli assault on the country. Images from Planet Labs PBC taken Friday showed damage at two missile bases, one in Kermanshah and one in Tabriz, both in western Iran. At Kermanshah, where the base is up against a mountainside, burns could be seen across a wide area after the attack. In Tabriz, images showed damage at multiple sites on the base. Iran has not acknowledged the damage, though it reported on Israeli strikes in the area. Top Sunni university condemns Israel's attack on Iran Al-Azhar al-Sharif, the Sunni world's foremost institution of religious learning, has condemned Israel's attack on Iran, describing Israel as a 'rogue entity.' 'The arrogance displayed by the Israeli occupation reflects the darkest form of occupation in modern history,' the Cairo-based university said in a statement early Saturday. It called on the international community to take 'urgent actions to halt the repeated violations committed by this rogue entity.' Iran is a powerhouse of Shiite Muslims in the region and often at odds with Sunni nations. Israeli military says it hit dozens of targets in Iran overnight The Israeli military said it carried out overnight strikes on dozens of targets, including air defenses, in the area of Iran's capital, Tehran. Maj. Gen. Tomer Bar, the Israeli air force commander, said the strikes carried 'operational and national significance.' Israel pauses natural gas supplies to Egypt, authorities in Cairo say Israel has paused natural gas supplies to Egypt amid its conflict with Iran, authorities in Cairo said. The move has forced the Egyptian government to stop supplying gas to some industries, according to a Friday statement from the Ministry of Petroleum. Some power plants that use natural gas in their operations have also reported fuel oil shortages amid peak summer demand, it said. Egypt faces a deepening domestic gas shortfall, with a more than 7% shortage in its daily gas needs to operate its power grid. Iran's Foreign Ministry calls nuclear talks with US 'meaningless' after Israeli strikes Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesman on Saturday called further nuclear talks with the United States 'meaningless' after Israeli strikes on the country, state television said. The comments by Esmail Baghaei further threw possible talks between the two nations, initially scheduled to take place Sunday in Oman, into doubt. 'The U.S. did a job that made the talks become meaningless,' Baghaei was quoted as saying. He added that Israel has passed all Iran's red lines by committing a 'criminal act' through its strikes. However, he stopped short of saying the talks were cancelled. The Mizan news agency, which is run by Iran's judiciary, quoted him as saying: 'It is still not clear what we decide about Sunday talks.' Jordan will reopen its airspace to civilian aircraft Jordan will reopen its airspace to civilian aircraft on Saturday morning, its state-run media reported, signaling the Mideast kingdom believes there is no immediate danger of further attacks. Jordan's state-run Petra news agency said the skies would reopen at 7:30 a.m. local time. Jordan's airspace had seen Iranian drones and missiles cross through it, with Israeli fighter jets likely engaging targets there. The crossfire between Israel and Iran disrupted East-West travel through the Mideast, a key global aviation route. Woman dies in missile strike in Tel Aviv, hospital says A spokesperson for Beilinson Hospital in Tel Aviv said a woman was killed in an Iranian missile strike, bringing the total number of fatalities in the barrages from Iran to three. The hospital also treated seven people who were wounded in the strike early Saturday. Israel's Fire and Rescue Services said a projectile hit a building in the city. Israel's paramedic service says 2 people killed when missile hit central Israel Israel's paramedic service Magen David Adom says an Iranian missile struck near homes in central Israel early Saturday morning, killing two people and injuring 19 others. Israel's Fire and Rescue service said four homes were severely damaged. UN chief calls for escalation to stop, saying 'peace and diplomacy must prevail' UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres urged Israel and Iran to halt their attacks on one another, while calling for diplomacy. 'Israeli bombardment of Iranian nuclear sites. Iranian missile strikes in Tel Aviv. Enough escalation. Time to stop. Peace and diplomacy must prevail,' Guterres wrote on X on Saturday. Iranian media reports a fire at Tehran's airport Iran's semi-official Tasnim news agency is reporting a fire at Tehran's Mehrabad International Airport, posting a video on X of a column of smoke and orange flames rising from what the outlet said was the airport. A handful of minor injuries reported from second wave of Iranian missiles Ichilov hospital in Tel Aviv said it has treated seven people hurt by the second Iranian barrage; six had light injuries and the seventh was moderately wounded. Iran fires a second wave of missiles at Israel Sirens and the boom of explosions, possibly from Israeli interceptors, could be heard in the sky over Jerusalem and Tel Aviv early Saturday. AP journalists in Tel Aviv could see what appeared to be at least two Iranian missiles hit the ground, but there was no immediate word of casualties. The Israeli military said another long-range Iranian missile attack was taking place and urged civilians, already rattled by the first wave of projectiles, to head to shelter. Around three dozen people were wounded by that first wave. The Iranian outlet Nour News, which has close links with the paramilitary Revolutionary Guard, said a fresh wave was being launched. Iranian air defenses are firing against Israeli attacks The sound of explosions and Iranian air defense systems firing at targets was echoing across the center of the capital, Tehran, shortly after midnight on Saturday. Additionally, an Associated Press reporter could hear air raid sirens near their home. The Associated Press

Hochul eying NYC Council Speaker Adrienne Adams, Queens BP Donovan Richards for lieutenant governor
Hochul eying NYC Council Speaker Adrienne Adams, Queens BP Donovan Richards for lieutenant governor

New York Post

time2 hours ago

  • New York Post

Hochul eying NYC Council Speaker Adrienne Adams, Queens BP Donovan Richards for lieutenant governor

NYC Council Speaker Adrienne Adams has her eyes on Albany if her longshot mayoral bid fails, The Post has learned. Adams is on Gov. Hochul's short list for lieutenant governor — and is in the process of using taxpayer money to open a fourth Council office to help bolster her popularity, according to multiple Albany insiders and City Hall sources. 'The governor is looking for someone like Adrienne who could generate votes downstate and align her with political naysayers,' said one insider. Hochul will face off in next year's Democratic primary against her estranged current No. 2, Antonio Delgado. Sources said Queens Borough President Donovan Richards is also being considered as a running mate for the Buffalo-born governor. 5 NYC Council Speaker Adrienne Adams is on Gov. Kathy Hochul's short list for lieutenant governor — and is in the process of using taxpayer money to open a fourth Council office to help bolster her popularity, according to multiple Albany insiders and City Hall sources Andrew Schwartz / Hochul is especially interested in boosting her popularity in Queens, and would be banking on either Adams or Richards to tap into the party's far-left and minority voting bases, which Delgado will also be courting, sources said. Richards is currently her 'No. 1 choice' and Adams '1A' – but that could change especially since Hochul wants to keep state Attorney General Letitia James an ally, and James is Adams' biggest booster in the NYC mayoral race, the insider said. 5 Queens Borough President Donovan Richards (second from left) is also under consideration to become Hochul's running mate in 2026. Gregory P. Mango Hank Sheinkopf, a longtime Democratic consultant, said a Hochul-Adams pairing makes perfect sense because 'having a black woman from southeast Queens' like Adams on the ticket 'would be helpful' for the governor's re-election bid. He also said the speaker will likely soon need another option when her final term on the Council expires at year's end, because she's a huge underdog in the mayoral race heading into the June 24 primary. The news of Hochul's interest in Adams potentially sheds light on why the speaker is planning to open yet another office despite being term-limited 5 The storefront exterior to NYC Council Speaker Adrienne Adams' new office in South Ozone Park has undergone a complete overhaul with nine security cameras and security lighting installed near the main entrance, which is locked by newly installed roll-down metal gates. Leonardo Munoz The new digs are at newly renovated storefront at 122-21 111th Ave in South Ozone Park, less than three miles from her other Queens district office at the Rochdale Village Shopping Center in Jamaica. Adams has yet to announce its grand opening, but she posted a flyer on social media this week noting a mobile unit from the New York Legal Assistance Group would be parked outside the 111th Avenue address from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesday to provide free legal services. The office was shuttered Thursday when a reporter visited, but residents who live nearby said they are well aware the speaker is moving in soon. The storefront's exterior has undergone a complete overhaul with nine security cameras and security lighting installed near the main entrance, which was locked by newly installed roll-down metal gates. 5 Adams (right) in 2023 posing with Sierra Club Executive Director Ben Jealous at her newly renovated City Hall office — which features 'toucan' orange-colored walls. Speaker Adrienne Adams/ Instagram It's unclear how much the renovations cost and what the rental payments are, but the building's landlord Suresh Rassbeharry told The Post he provided some of the upgrades per their lease agreement and Adams 'picked up the other costs' including the security features. Adams is already under fire from critics over a Post report in April exposing how she green-lit hundreds of thousands of dollars in top-to-bottom renovations for her main digs in City Hall, a suite of offices across the street at 250 Broadway in Lower Manhattan, and to move her Jamaica district office. It is unclear what pile of taxpayer cash paid for the previous decorating — or for the new office. 5 Gov. Kathy Hochul is especially interested in boosting her popularity in Queens and would be banking on either Adams or Richards tapping into the party's far-left and minority voting bases, according to insiders. Michael Brochstein/ZUMA / The City Council by law sets its own expense budget, which historically operates like a shell game. Pots of money are moved from one line item to another on a whim after the yearly spending plan is adopted — and many of these revisions are rarely accounted for or updated in public records, according to council members and other City Hall sources. Hochul's campaign, Adams' campaign and Richards declined comment. Councilman Robert Holden (R-Queens) said Adams' latest office splurge is head-scratching. 'The speaker will be out of office in less than six months and she will not be mayor, so it makes no sense for her to open another district office at taxpayer expense — unless she is planning her next move to keep cashing in — but either way, it makes no sense,' he said.

Pro-Palestine protesters on ‘march to Gaza' beaten by Egyptian police
Pro-Palestine protesters on ‘march to Gaza' beaten by Egyptian police

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Pro-Palestine protesters on ‘march to Gaza' beaten by Egyptian police

Egyptian authorities halted demonstrators planning to march to the country's border with Gaza with the stated aim of breaking Israel's blockade on the territory. A separate convoy of protesters travelling from Tunisia to meet the larger group was also stopped on Friday by security forces in eastern Libya. Men in plain clothes were seen in footage kicking and beating demonstrators and attempting to drag some away from the group. The protesters responded by throwing water at the men, video footage shows. It was not immediately clear whether the assaults were by security services or bystanders, and what unfolded prior to the altercations. Organisers of the protest – Global March to Gaza – said that 4,000 protesters from 80 countries were planning to land in Egypt for the demonstration. The additional convoy coming to Egypt overland was said to be around another 2,000 people. Credit: X/@globalmarchgaza | X/@bopanc Passports of at least 40 people were confiscated, organisers said, after demonstrators demanded to be let through a checkpoint patrolled by officers in riot gear and flanked by armoured vehicles. Security forces then began forcibly detaining and removing activists to halt the protests. 'Forty participants of the Global March to Gaza have had their passports taken at a checkpoint on the way out of Cairo,' organisers said in a statement. 'They are being held in the heat and not allowed to move,' the statement said, adding that another '15 are being held at hotels'. The activists are from France, Spain, Canada, Turkey and the United Kingdom, the statement said. It added: 'We are a peaceful movement and we are complying with Egyptian law.' The group urged embassies to help secure their release so they could complete their voyage. Among those who have been detained include Irish MP Paul Murphy, Turkish MP Faruk Dincer, and Hala Rharrit, a former US diplomat who resigned from her position over Washington's handling of the war in Gaza. A clip of Dincer, released by his political party, shows him in blood-stained clothes. A statement said that he 'was injured as a result of an attack'. 'We have had our passports confiscated and are being detained,' Mr Murphy posted on X. 'It seems Egyptian authorities have decided to crack down on the #GreatMarchTo Gaza. We are refusing to board the deportation bus.' Murphy, along with others, are now being taken to the airport in Cairo and will be deported. Some activists, like Ms Rharrit, were detained and interrogated upon arriving in Cairo. As reports were released of demonstrators being blocked, arrested and deported, some international activists who arrived to Cairo later chose instead to stay behind. The march drew a number of high-profile participants, including Nkosi Zwelivelile Mandela, a former South African lawmaker and grandson of Nelson Mandela. It is the latest in a spate of similar demonstrations, aimed at drawing attention to the devastating humanitarian crises that have swept the Gaza Strip after Israel sealed the border and blocked aid trucks from entering in March. The Madleen, a Gaza-bound aid boat carrying Greta Thunberg, the Swedish climate activist, arrived at an Israeli port earlier in the week. She and the other activists on board were quickly deported by Israeli authorities. Israel began allowing some limited aid into Gaza last month, but experts and charities have said the supplies were nowhere near the volume needed for the enclave, which has been bombarded with Israeli strikes. The march underscores Egypt's challenging position as a country that receives US military aid, and the first Arab nation to sign a peace treaty with Israel in 1979. The country, similarly to Jordan, has simultaneously cracked down on pro-Palestine activists while publicly calling for the war in Gaza to end. Israel Katz, the Israeli defence minister, said on Wednesday he expected the Egyptian authorities to prevent and halt the demonstrators at 'the border of Egypt-Israel and not allow them to carry out provocations and to try to enter into Gaza'. Mr Katz said the arrival of the demonstrators could 'endanger the security of the IDF [Israel Defence Forces] soldiers and we will not allow it'. Alexis Deswaef, a Belgian human rights lawyer, said he woke up to find dozens of security vehicles packed with uniformed officers in an area of Cairo where he and other activists were staying in hotels ahead of the planned march. 'I am so surprised to see the Egyptians doing the dirty work of Israel,' he said. The UK has updated its travel advice for Egypt in light of the detentions and deportations linked to the march, and has advised 'against all travel towards North Sinai'. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

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