The authorities stopped the 11-bus caravan at Balouza checkpoint yesterday, 150 km south-west of Rafah border crossing where the aid was to be delivered to the Palestinian people.
"...We were surprised that we were allowed to enter North Sinai as the army duly opened the gate for the fleet."
"But when we reached the Rafah border crossing, the last stop before Gaza; authorities refused permission for the vehicles to enter," Ahmed el-Shamy, a freelance journalist and one of the participant in the aid program said.
"We, then, agreed to pledge that everyone is responsible for his security, but the authorities refused this.
"Some of them said they will sit in and protest, but authorities forced us to return again," el-Shamy added.
The convoy, comprising of a number of prominent Egyptian activists and political figures, left Cairo in the early hours yesterday.
The relief material contained mainly food supplies and medical equipments.
The authorities also cited lack of official permit for denying the permission to the fleet, according to Al-Watan newspaper.
In 2012, a similar Egyptian convoy was able to cross into Gaza during the Israeli assault on the strip, although at that time militant activity in Sinai was vastly reduced, and there were no Israeli ground troops in Gaza.
The Rafah crossing has been closed for most of the time since the military ouster of Mohamed Morsi in July 2013, citing security concerns related to the spike in Islamist militancy in the Sinai peninsula.
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