‘National Security Is a Red Line that Cannot Be Crossed,’ Sisi Assures Egyptians

Sisi attending the inauguration of the Decent Life initiative in Cairo. (Egyptian Presidency Spokesman’s Facebook page)
Sisi attending the inauguration of the Decent Life initiative in Cairo. (Egyptian Presidency Spokesman’s Facebook page)
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‘National Security Is a Red Line that Cannot Be Crossed,’ Sisi Assures Egyptians

Sisi attending the inauguration of the Decent Life initiative in Cairo. (Egyptian Presidency Spokesman’s Facebook page)
Sisi attending the inauguration of the Decent Life initiative in Cairo. (Egyptian Presidency Spokesman’s Facebook page)

President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi assured the entire nation amid the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) crisis, saying that “Egypt’s national security, including its rights, is a red line that cannot be crossed.”

The president acknowledged the citizens’ concerns regarding the dam as “legitimate” but reaffirmed that the country would not allow anyone to infringe on its resources.

He reiterated Egypt’s demand that Ethiopia and Sudan sign a legally binding agreement on the filling and operation of the GERD.

“Let’s make a legally binding agreement that will bring prosperity, security and peace to all of us,” he said.

He called on Egyptians to ignore rumors, stressing he has long been “honest, loyal and trustworthy” to the people and remains so.

Trilateral GERD negotiations between Egypt, Sudan and Ethiopia were brought to a halt last April after the three countries failed to reach an agreement on filling and operating the controversial dam built on the main tributary of the Nile River.

The lack of agreement has forced downstream countries, Egypt and Sudan, to present the conflict’s case to the UN Security Council.

Nevertheless, Ethiopia has notified Egypt and Sudan that it will resume the second phase of filling the GERD’s reservoir. This decision was met with anger from Egypt and Sudan, which are demanding first signing a legally binding agreement on filling and operating the dam.

“We have the economic and military power to impose our will and defend our interests. We have several options, and we will consider them according to the situation and the circumstances at the time,” said Sisi during a public speech at the inauguration of the Decent Life initiative in Cairo.

“We spoke with the Sudanese and the Ethiopians and made it clear during all our talks that we want the Nile [used] for cooperation and partnership,” he said, adding that Egypt does not intervene in other countries’ affairs or internal issues.



First Guillain-Barré Deaths Reported in Gaza Amid Warnings of Outbreak

Displaced Palestinians gather for food aid at Nuseirat corridor in central Gaza on Monday (AFP)
Displaced Palestinians gather for food aid at Nuseirat corridor in central Gaza on Monday (AFP)
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First Guillain-Barré Deaths Reported in Gaza Amid Warnings of Outbreak

Displaced Palestinians gather for food aid at Nuseirat corridor in central Gaza on Monday (AFP)
Displaced Palestinians gather for food aid at Nuseirat corridor in central Gaza on Monday (AFP)

Gaza’s health ministry said on Tuesday it had registered the Palestinian enclave’s first three deaths from Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) – two children and a 60-year-old woman – warning of a “dangerous escalation” in paralysis cases as war-related malnutrition and unsanitary conditions fuel disease.

Ayman Abu Rahma, head of preventive medicine, told Asharq Al-Awsat that the ministry registered 64 GBS infections in the past two months alone, compared with four or five cases a year before the conflict.

“Without prompt treatment within the first 48 hours, patients’ health deteriorates quickly,” he said, adding that shortages of intravenous immunoglobulin and other drugs were proving deadly.

Laboratory tests have detected enteroviruses and the poliovirus in recent samples, the ministry said, evidence of what it called a “fertile environment for uncontrollable outbreaks.” It appealed to international agencies to rush life-saving medicines into the strip and to press Israel to lift its blockade.

Surge in acute flaccid paralysis

Doctors have also documented a rise in acute flaccid paralysis – a condition that mimics polio – mostly in children under five. “Roughly 80 percent of all infectious-disease notifications now involve that age group,” Abu Rahma said.

He linked the spike to “atypical infections” spreading through contaminated water and food supplies and to a sharp decline in immunity caused by prolonged hunger. Nurses at Khan Younis’s Nasser Medical Complex say they are treating growing numbers of severely undernourished children alongside paralysis victims.

Humanitarian free-fall

Famine conditions are deepening despite sporadic aid deliveries, many of which are looted by armed gangs, residents and aid workers say. The ministry reported six adult starvation deaths in the past 24 hours, bringing the toll from hunger since the war began to 180, including 93 children.

More than 80 Palestinians were killed across Gaza on Monday, 39 of them while waiting for food parcels at distribution points run by the US-based Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, the ministry added.

What is Guillain-Barré?

GBS is a rare autoimmune disorder in which the body’s immune system attacks peripheral nerves, starting with tingling and weakness in the legs and sometimes progressing to full paralysis.

About one in five patients require temporary ventilatory support within a week of hospital admission. Complications can include heart-rhythm disturbances, blood-pressure swings, nerve pain, bowel and bladder dysfunction, and life-threatening blood clots or pressure sores.