Zürcher Nachrichten - 'Pay or he dies', families told as more Egyptians risk Mediterranean crossing

EUR -
AED 4.235251
AFN 74.946663
ALL 95.845585
AMD 434.253617
ANG 2.064019
AOA 1057.328074
ARS 1599.970173
AUD 1.669005
AWG 2.075453
AZN 1.960819
BAM 1.954469
BBD 2.317142
BDT 141.163856
BGN 1.970884
BHD 0.434912
BIF 3425.651217
BMD 1.15303
BND 1.481759
BOB 7.949586
BRL 5.927037
BSD 1.150426
BTN 107.162014
BWP 15.783319
BYN 3.408937
BYR 22599.381977
BZD 2.313744
CAD 1.605473
CDF 2651.967946
CHF 0.921997
CLF 0.02676
CLP 1056.639736
CNY 7.935841
CNH 7.935271
COP 4246.631419
CRC 535.328433
CUC 1.15303
CUP 30.555287
CVE 110.54672
CZK 24.519752
DJF 204.916296
DKK 7.472768
DOP 69.902447
DZD 153.255495
EGP 62.603862
ERN 17.295445
ETB 180.685214
FJD 2.607579
FKP 0.87304
GBP 0.87233
GEL 3.089968
GGP 0.87304
GHS 12.694304
GIP 0.87304
GMD 84.751681
GNF 10120.726709
GTQ 8.801006
GYD 240.786005
HKD 9.037054
HNL 30.682358
HRK 7.534586
HTG 150.992578
HUF 382.063345
IDR 19694.900181
ILS 3.628365
IMP 0.87304
INR 107.118707
IQD 1510.468897
IRR 1517156.469825
ISK 144.405398
JEP 0.87304
JMD 181.375682
JOD 0.817521
JPY 184.34697
KES 150.009052
KGS 100.83265
KHR 4626.530038
KMF 492.34323
KPW 1037.726453
KRW 1740.579301
KWD 0.356678
KYD 0.958747
KZT 545.158702
LAK 25320.531466
LBP 103242.432809
LKR 362.979078
LRD 212.445882
LSL 19.445877
LTL 3.404597
LVL 0.697456
LYD 7.35053
MAD 10.81253
MDL 20.24274
MGA 4797.756184
MKD 61.511217
MMK 2421.095162
MNT 4118.900865
MOP 9.287774
MRU 46.259501
MUR 54.134711
MVR 17.813947
MWK 2002.234314
MXN 20.510666
MYR 4.654774
MZN 73.747714
NAD 19.451896
NGN 1590.129675
NIO 42.351333
NOK 11.201977
NPR 171.456993
NZD 2.023832
OMR 0.442891
PAB 1.150416
PEN 3.950568
PGK 4.966075
PHP 69.429704
PKR 321.753059
PLN 4.270269
PYG 7441.995936
QAR 4.202905
RON 5.097772
RSD 117.377005
RUB 92.550486
RWF 1684.576381
SAR 4.32767
SBD 9.2764
SCR 16.63133
SDG 692.970821
SEK 10.921774
SGD 1.483229
SHP 0.865071
SLE 28.36423
SLL 24178.468623
SOS 658.951068
SRD 43.066798
STD 23865.386681
STN 24.84779
SVC 10.066144
SYP 127.484145
SZL 19.439932
THB 37.663136
TJS 11.02699
TMT 4.035604
TND 3.365687
TOP 2.776218
TRY 51.437235
TTD 7.804786
TWD 36.853163
TZS 2997.877416
UAH 50.385247
UGX 4316.060411
USD 1.15303
UYU 46.58827
UZS 14038.136253
VES 545.921739
VND 30369.649076
VUV 137.562835
WST 3.189601
XAF 655.504863
XAG 0.015925
XAU 0.000248
XCD 3.11612
XCG 2.073388
XDR 0.814331
XOF 655.49686
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.113567
ZAR 19.503266
ZMK 10378.650034
ZMW 22.232051
ZWL 371.275091
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSC

    0.1400

    22.18

    +0.63%

  • NGG

    -0.9300

    87.06

    -1.07%

  • GSK

    -0.3200

    56.37

    -0.57%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2400

    15.75

    -1.52%

  • BTI

    0.4300

    58.71

    +0.73%

  • BP

    0.3600

    47.48

    +0.76%

  • AZN

    -0.6600

    202.83

    -0.33%

  • RELX

    0.0200

    33.61

    +0.06%

  • BCE

    -0.1900

    24.26

    -0.78%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    22.35

    +0.4%

  • RIO

    -0.4400

    94.01

    -0.47%

  • JRI

    0.1200

    12.73

    +0.94%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    15.14

    -0.46%

  • BCC

    0.5500

    73.75

    +0.75%

'Pay or he dies', families told as more Egyptians risk Mediterranean crossing
'Pay or he dies', families told as more Egyptians risk Mediterranean crossing / Photo: Khaled DESOUKI - AFP

'Pay or he dies', families told as more Egyptians risk Mediterranean crossing

Weeks after Hamdy Ibrahim left his village in Egypt's Nile Delta hoping to reach Europe, his brother's phone rang with a chilling message from Libya: pay now or the boy would die.

Text size:

A smuggler was on the line, demanding 190,000 pounds ($4,000) to secure the 18-year-old's place on a boat, part of a rising exodus that last year made Egyptians the top African and second-largest global group of irregular migrants to Europe.

"I told him we couldn't afford it," his brother Youssef told AFP from Kafr Abdallah Aziza in Sharqiya, an hour's drive from Cairo.

"But he warned: 'Handle it like the other families do. Otherwise he'll be thrown into the sea.'"

Hamdy left in November with a dozen peers, vanishing without a word after contacting smugglers online. Soon, calls poured in from Libya.

Families were told the men would "be slaughtered or thrown into the mountains or sea" if they did not pay, said 55-year-old Abed Gouda, whose brother Mohamed was among them.

Desperate parents borrowed heavily, sold gold and gave up what little they had to save their sons. But weeks later, they learned the boat carrying the group had sunk near the Greek island of Crete.

Seventeen people died -- including six from the village -- and 15 remain missing, among them Hamdy and Mohamed.

More than 17,000 Egyptians reached Europe via the Mediterranean last year, while 1,328 people of all nationalities died or disappeared on the world's deadliest migration route, according to Frontex and the UN.

In recent years, a currency collapse and soaring inflation have deepened poverty nationwide, leaving much of Egypt's more than 50 million people under 30 feeling they have no future at home.

In Kafr Abdallah Aziza, the pressures are clear: cracked irrigation canals cut jagged lines through unpaved roads, carrying only a trickle of water to parched fields.

Women ride past on donkey carts, piled high with vegetables, jolting over potholes deep enough to trap a wheel.

Half-built brick houses sit on once-fertile land, where families eke out meagre livings through small trades or day labour.

When AFP visited, relatives of the missing packed into a local elder's cramped home, showing WhatsApp and Facebook groups filled with blurry images, unverified lists and rumours.

- 'Lack of hope' -

"Half of our young people are now considering illegal migration," said village pharmacist Refaat Abdelsamad, 40.

Since 2022, the Egyptian pound has lost over two-thirds of its value. Bread prices have tripled and fuel costs have risen four times in two years.

That same year, Egyptians were already among the largest groups attempting irregular migration, with the UN recording more than 21,000 arrivals.

"Desperation and economic deterioration are major factors," Timothy Kaldas, deputy director of the Tahrir Institute for Middle East Policy, told AFP.

There is a "lack of hope that things will improve".

Hamdy earned just 500 Egyptian pounds ($10) a week as a plumber. He left, his brother said, because he "just wanted a better life".

After Egypt curbed irregular departures from its own shores in 2016, routes shifted west through Libya, where smugglers move migrants across the desert in minibuses and pickup trucks -- a journey Nour Khalil of the Egypt Refugees Platform calls "more dangerous".

The UN says Egyptians rely on "well-established smuggling networks" that charge high fees while survivors report "arbitrary detention, torture, rape, sexual slavery, starvation and forced labour", according to French charity SOS Mediterranee.

In 2024, the EU signed a 7.4-billion-euro economic development deal with Cairo, in part to curb irregular migration.

But Kaldas said border controls miss the root cause: "People need to feel secure in their homes."

Across Egypt, Khalil said migration has become "a widespread goal", even among educated professionals.

"Those who can leave legally do so. Those who can't are pushed into irregular migration, even if the journey carries extreme risks," he told AFP.

- 'I'd do it again' -

In Kafr Moustafa Effendi, families still mourn the dozens of young men who died or vanished in 2023 when a rusty fishing boat carrying 750 migrants capsized off Greece -- one of the deadliest shipwrecks in the Mediterranean, now the subject of multiple court cases over alleged coastguard negligence.

Islam and El-Sayed, both 18 then, were aboard after their families scraped together 140,000 pounds each, their cousin Abdallah Ghanem told AFP.

"Back then, people caught minibuses to Libya as casually as if they were travelling to another town in Egypt."

Despite the grief, the hopeful cling to success stories.

Construction worker Hassan Darwish left Sharqiya in 2023, believing he had "no future" in Egypt.

Now 24 and living in Rome, he says he earns about $700 monthly while awaiting asylum.

"I saw horrors," he told AFP by phone. "But I'd do it again."

He now supports his mother and sick brother, which "would never have been possible in Egypt".

T.Furrer--NZN