Egyptian authorities took dozens of anti-Israel activists into custody this past Thursday after thwarting a planned march to Gaza before deporting them. Egypt detained up to 200 pro-Hamas supporters disguised as Gaza supporters. Tey had their passports conviscated and would receive them back after deporation. Those who remained decidede they would march to Gaza. That was a bad mistake as Egyptians threw water bottles at them and beat the crap out of them. Regular Muslims are not enamored by Hamas like Jihadis are.
I couldn’t make this up if I tried: a group of European activists pulled a “Greta Thunberg goes to Cairo” move, demanding that Egyptians break the Gaza siege. The Egyptian crowd responded… by breaking them instead. 💀 Now they’re in custody, passports confiscated, and under… pic.twitter.com/dvhYzpTnAr
— Sarai (Sarah Idan) Miss Iraq (@RealSarahIdan) June 14, 2025
Sarah Idan posted on X:
“A group of European activists pulled a ‘Greta Thunberg goes to Cairo’ move, demanding that Egyptians break the Gaza siege. The Egyptian crowd responded… by breaking them instead.”
VISIT OUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL“We tried to tell you: Arabs aren’t signing up for the Hamas fan club. But nope, you chose to listen to the Western Islamists over us regular Muslims.”
Thunberg, a notorious environmental activist, sought to enter Gaza by boat earlier in June to protest Israel’s military operations in response to the Oct. 7, 2023, attack by the radical Islamic terrorist group Hamas that killed over 1,200 people. Israeli naval forces halted the vessel she was on and deported her back to Sweden via airplane.
Egyptians have beaten and stripped left wing activists from their passports when they tried to march to Gaza! pic.twitter.com/Nyi3tXIKZZ
— Azat (@AzatAlsalim) June 14, 2025
“Egyptians have beaten and stripped left wing activists from their passports when they tried to march to Gaza!” another user, Azat, posted on X.
While Israel has faced mounting pressure to accept a ceasefire due to allegations of civilian casualties, a study released in December by the Henry Jackson Society noted that media organizations often relied uncritically on data from the Gaza Ministry of Health, despite multiple errors.




















