The notice in Sharm
el-Sheikh urges tourists to "continue their holidays as normal", but
tensions from the Egyptian uprising are beginning to seep down to the Red
Sea resort.
On the surface, visitors
to the Sinai resort, which is still recovering from recent shark attacks,
appear more worried about swimming restrictions than revolution.
Pleasure boats were
still taking daytrippers out to the Red Sea's coral
reefs and speedboats zipped up and down the coast, but some holidaymakers were
anxious.
Kjell Irgum, a Norwegian
recently arrived in Sharm with friends, has yet to venture out of his hotel.
"We're pretty
worried," he said. We are far from Cairo,
but we are staying in our hotel for now."
Others had been unable
to reassure their families because of intermittent mobile phone coverage – and
the absence of the internet, blocked since Thursday.
"My brother's been
trying to send me text messages asking if we're OK," said Hannah Davison
from Much Wenlock, Shropshire. "We're conscious of
what's happening – we've been watching the news – but it does feel as if we're
in a bubble here."
Pat and John Foote, a
couple from Swindon newly arrived in Sharm, were a little surprised to have
made it into the bubble at all.
"I heard that France
has stopped all its citizens from travelling here. Excursions to Cairo
have been stopped – to the disappointment of some guests – and the bars and cafes
are quieter than normal.
There were reports that
a group of Bedouins, nomads who live in the Sinai desert, had attacked Sharm's
old market. Workers in a cafe near the market said a group of Bedouin men had
turned up to try to loot stalls, but were chased away by locals brandishing
sticks.
Stuart McLaughlin and
Vicki Rose, from Nottingham, said they had ventured out
into Na'ama Bay, the centre of Sharm's tourist industry, to find cafes being
hastily closed up.
In the cafes, bars and
restaurants, where the TVs are tuned constantly to the news channels,
holidaymakers are picking up on the fears of the staff. Egyptians come from all
over the country to work in Sharm; many of them from Cairo
and Alexandria. Now that the road
to Cairo has been closed and all
public transport stopped, the workers have no way of travelling home to be with
their families.
The Foreign Office has
not changed its advice for Britons travelling to Sharm el-Sheikh, and companies
such as Thomas Cook are at pains to reassure customers that there is no threat
of trouble.
The sentiments are
echoed by those working in Egypt's
valuable tourist sector. "Please tell people at home that it is safe
here," one tour rep told departing guests.
He need not worry for
Lee and Keith Marsh, from Gerrards Cross, Buckinghamshire, who have another
week in Egypt.
"The holiday must
go on," said Lee. "I know my daughter at home has been pretty worried
about us, but we're not concerned.
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