Three senior employees of Qatar’s Amiri Diwan, the country’s top government body, were killed in a car crash near Egypt’s Red Sea resort city of Sharm el-Sheikh on Sunday, according to a statement from Qatar’s embassy in Cairo.

What happened:

Security sources told Reuters that the vehicle carrying the Qatari officials overturned on a curve roughly 50 kilometers (31 miles) from Sharm el-Sheikh. Egyptian media reported that five Qataris and an Egyptian driver were in the car, which lost control due to a steering malfunction.

Details:

Two others were injured and are receiving treatment at Sharm el-Sheikh International Hospital. The victims were identified as Saud bin Nasser Al Thani, Abdullah Ghanem Al-Khulaifi, and Hassan Jaber Al-Jaber.

The embassy confirmed that the injured and the bodies of the deceased would be repatriated to Doha later on Sunday.

Context:

The accident occurred just days after Qatari, Turkish, and Egyptian officials held indirect talks in Sharm el-Sheikh that led to a preliminary agreement between Israel and Hamas as part of the first phase of U.S. President Donald Trump’s so-called peace plan to end the war in Gaza. The Egyptian resort city is set to host a global summit on Monday aimed at finalizing the ceasefire and hostage release deal.

Why it matters:

The deaths come at a sensitive diplomatic moment, as Qatar plays a key mediating role in the Gaza negotiations. The loss of high-ranking officials from the Amiri Diwan could impact Qatar’s participation in the upcoming summit and underscores the risks faced by diplomats operating in high-stakes conflict zones.

Go deeper:

Egypt Rejects Any Attempt to Displace Palestinians

Hossein Amiri - A.Akbari