![Cargo ship still stuck across Suez Canal, but Egyptian official says it will be freed over weekend](https://cbsnews2.cbsistatic.com/hub/i/r/2021/03/25/671bb182-ff0e-47dd-8d73-83fb468aad37/thumbnail/1200x630/6d542794ee9ba91c0c31591870f60a48/egypt-sca-ever-given.jpg)
Cargo ship still stuck across Suez Canal, but Egyptian official says it will be freed over weekend
CBSN
Cairo — Marine traffic through the Suez Canal remained blocked on Friday for the fourth consecutive day, with dozens of ships stuck at both the north and south entrances to the shortest route between Asia and Africa. Efforts to dislodge one of the world's largest cargo vessels, stuck sideways across the narrow canal since Tuesday, were picking up, and while one of the teams in charge of the operation said it could take weeks, an advisor to Egypt's president offered a more optimistic time table.
Mohab Mamish, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi's advisor on seaports and the former chairman of the Suez Canal Authority, told the AFP news agency on Thursday that navigation through the canal "will resume again within 48-72 hours, maximum." Mamish cited his "experience with several rescue operations of this kind" and said he knew "every centimeter of the canal."More Related News