foreign tourists and workers from Egypt amid growing protests to force
out beleaguered President Hosni Mubarak.
In Washington, Assistant Secretary of State Janice Jacobs said at
least 2,600 Americans in Egypt have asked US officials for help in
leaving.
More than 1,200 left the country Monday on nine flights headed for
Larnaca in Cyprus, Istanbul and Athens, according to the State
Department.
"We want to make sure that anyone who needs our help is getting that,
and so, yes, I do expect those numbers to go up over the next few
days," Jacobs said.
"We are encouraging Americans who want to take advantage of these
charter flights to go to the airport, but I should say that people
should be prepared for a very long wait."
Chaotic scenes unfolded at Cairo airport as authorities struggled to
cope with an influx of thousands of departing passengers.
At least six more flights for US citizens were planned on Tuesday, and
about 40 extra consular staff have been deployed to Cairo and the
three arrival points in a bid to speed up evacuations, officials said.
China meanwhile sent two Airbus A330 jets to bring its nationals back
from Egypt.
"The Chinese government attaches great importance to the security of
Chinese citizens in Egypt, and has coordinated relevant airlines to
increase flights to bring back stranded Chinese citizens," said a
foreign ministry source quoted by Xinhua news agency.
Turkey said it had brought 1,144 of its citizens home aboard five
specially chartered aircraft of Turkish Airlines from Cairo and
Alexandria on Sunday night, in addition to 330 flown back over the
weekend.
Indonesia ordered its citizens to leave Egypt, where more than 6,000
are believed to reside, and promised to dispatch military aircraft to
bring them home.
Japan said it was sending emergency charter planes to evacuate
hundreds of Japanese, some of whom have already left while many others
were stranded at Cairo airport.
Thai Airways planned a special flight to Cairo to repatriate Thai
tourists, but noted there were problems to overcome such as ground
servicing and refueling as it had no regular services to the Egyptian
capital.
Air India chartered a plane to bring back 320 Indians and decided to
divert another flight from its regular Mumbai-Jeddah route to pick up
more, airport sources told the Press Trust of India news agency.
Tunisair said it would be ferrying 150 Tunisians back to the country
whose own toppling of president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali sparked the
Egyptian unrest.
While tour operators in many countries were planning to bring clients
back earlier than scheduled and canceled further excursions, they said
the situation in the main beach resorts on the Red Sea remained calm.
Foreign companies also began bringing home expatriate employees and
their families.
France Telecom and building materials company Saint Gobain said they
were following the example of other French groups, cement firm Lafarge
and bank Credit Agricole, and repatriating some 50 people.
Lafarge, which employs 70 expatriates in Egypt, and Italy's
Italcementi were halting cement production there, while Danish
shipping and oil group A.P. Moeller-Maersk also said it was suspending
its activities.
In Germany, wholesale distributor Metro said it had brought back 20-30
employees, adding that its two hypermarkets in Cairo had been looted
and were closed.
Energy group RWE said it had flown out some 90 people and vehicle
maker Daimler fewer than 50.
Russian companies Lukoil and Novatek were also evacuating staff, but
Moscow has given no order for some 40,000 tourists to come home and
many were happy to stay on the beach, agencies said.
Saudi Arabia said it organized 33 flights between Saturday and Monday
to take its nationals home.
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper called for a "transition toward
basic values of freedom, democracy, human rights and justice," while
up to 335 Canadians and other foreign nationals were flown out of the
country aboard chartered aircraft to escape bloody anti-government
protests.
Britain was advising its nationals to leave flashpoint Egyptian
cities, but tour operators stressed there was no need to pull tourists
out of popular Red Sea resorts.
France has also warned against unnecessary travel to Egypt, but
foreign ministry spokesman Bernard Valero said Paris was not yet
considering evacuating its roughly 10,000 citizens in the country.