Cairo - Akram Ali
A group of customs employees at the Suez seaport have revealed that the Egyptian Ministry of Interior is in the process of receiving 21 tonnes of tear gas from the US. The claim was supported by Medhat Eissa, an activist in the coastal city of Suez, who provided documents he says he obtained from a group of employees at the Suez Canal customs. The employees have been subjected to questioning for their refusal to allow an initial seven ton shipment of the US-made tear gas canisters enter the port. A customs officer, who asked not to mention her name, told ‘Arabstoday’ that, five officers refused to receive this shipment, as it angered them after recent events at Tahrir Square. As a result, the administration decided to launch an investigations while the five officers were sent to the Central Administration of Customs. A group of employees at the Adabiya Seaport in Suez have confirmed, with the documents to prove it, that a three-stage shipment of in total 21 tonnes of tear gas canisters is on course for the port from the American port of Wilmington. Employees say the container ship Danica, carrying seven tons of tear-gas canisters made by the American company Combined Systems, has already arrived at the port, with two similar shipments from the same company expected to arrive within the week. Eisa added that a World Health Organisation (WHO) report says that the company which sent the containers is a banned by WHO, as it dealt with internationally banned tear gas bombs.