Oh, also:

I've never seen Camellia offered as a GPG cypher option

rjh@sarah:~$ gpg --version
gpg (GnuPG) 2.4.6
libgcrypt 1.11.0
Copyright (C) 2024 g10 Code GmbH
License GNU GPL-3.0-or-later <https://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>
This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it.
There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.

Home: /home/rjh/.gnupg
Supported algorithms:
Pubkey: RSA, ELG, DSA, ECDH, ECDSA, EDDSA
Cipher: IDEA, 3DES, CAST5, BLOWFISH, AES, AES192, AES256, TWOFISH,
        CAMELLIA128, CAMELLIA192, CAMELLIA256
Hash: SHA1, RIPEMD160, SHA256, SHA384, SHA512, SHA224
Compression: Uncompressed, ZIP, ZLIB, BZIP2

Right there you go, Camellia in three keylengths on Fedora Workstation 42. It is almost certainly supported by your GnuPG installation.

so I'm not sure of the relevance of including it.

Camellia is Japan's answer to AES and is included in GnuPG in order to better support the needs of Japanese users.

Attachment: OpenPGP_signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature

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