Egypt and some began evacuating their citizens as bloody
anti-government protests raged into a seventh day.
The United States and Iraq said they were starting to organize
evacuations of their nationals, while Turkey, India, Greece, Canada
and Saudi Arabia either planned to or had already sent planes to begin
taking out their citizens.
Britain, France, China, Australia, Argentina and Nordic countries
warned their citizens not to travel to the country but had no plans
yet for full-scale evacuations.
"US citizens in Egypt should consider leaving as soon as they can do
so," Assistant Secretary of State Janice Jacobs told reporters in a
conference call.
The United States plans to begin evacuating Americans on Monday aboard
government-arranged chartered planes. Athens, Istanbul and Nicosia
have been identified as possible "safe havens." She did not know the
number of Americans in Egypt.
Iraq said it would lay on special flights to evacuate its citizens
from Egypt and Turkey said it sent five planes to evacuate its
approximately 750 citizens registered in the country.
Saudi Arabia said it organized 33 flights between Saturday and Monday
to take its nationals home.
India sent a passenger plane to Cairo to evacuate Indian citizens, as
did the small ex-Soviet republic of Azerbaijan, which said one of its
embassy staff had been killed from a gunshot wound in the unrest.
The Canadian government "is recommending that Canadians leave,"
Foreign Minister Lawrence Cannon said Sunday. Ottawa planned to
charter planes to get Canadians to evacuation points in Europe,
possibly beginning Monday.
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.
The British Foreign Office advised against all but essential travel to
Cairo, Alexandria, Suez and Luxor.
"We do want people to take the opportunity if they are able to
leave... but as yet the situation has not reached the stage where we
would necessarily be considering chartering planes and getting larger
numbers out," Foreign Office minister Alistair Burt told the BBC.
The Foreign Office said some 30,000 Britons were in the country.
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.
"We have the capacity to react" if need be, Valero told AFP, adding
that France was "permanently monitoring" the situation in Egypt and
"completely mobilized" to assist French citizens.
In Australia, the Foreign Office upgraded its travel warning from
"reconsider your need to travel" to "do not travel", counseling
Australians against journeying to Egypt and advising those currently
there to get out if possible.
Prime Minister Julia Gillard said there were 870 Australians
registered in Egypt but the real number was "likely to be in the
thousands" and told anyone who could safely exit to strongly consider
doing so.
China's embassy in Cairo said on its website that the foreign ministry
in Beijing had issued a "red" warning on Sunday, "requiring all
Chinese citizens not to travel to Egypt."
It urged Chinese nationals in Egypt to be careful of their safety and
not to go outside unless necessary, adding that 300 Chinese nationals
had been stranded due to cancelled flights.
Russia said it had no plans to immediately evacuate its about 40,000
citizens in Egypt.
"There is no reason to evacuate Russian tourists from Egypt for the
moment," a spokesman for the country's tourism agency, Oleg Moseyev,
told the Ria Novosti news agency.
"People are continuing to leave for the country's seaside resorts,
while signing a note saying they are aware of the situation," he said,
adding that only three tourists had asked their tour operators to cut
short their trip.
A Belgian tour operator, Jetair, announced it was evacuating all its
clients from Egypt but the country's government said it would not
organize a full-scale evacuation.
"For the moment, we don't envisage urging Belgians living in Egypt to
leave the country or organize evacuations," a foreign ministry
spokesman said, though a warning against traveling to Egypt was still
in place.
Argentina urged its citizens Sunday to avoid travel to Egypt "until
the situation returns to normal," according to a statement.