The deadliest attack was in the Suez Canal city of Ismailia, east of Cairo, where masked gunmen opened fire on an army patrol. Six soldiers were killed, including a lieutenant.
Meanwhile on Sinai, a suicide car bomber attacked the security headquarters in the southern city of El-Tor. Four people were killed, including the bomber, and 55 more were injured.
Mohamed Ibrahim, the interior minister, confirmed that the attack was a suicide bombing and said it was meant to “distract” people and cause instability.
Near-daily attacks on the peninsula have escalated in the three months since the Egyptian army ousted President Mohamed Morsi. But this was among the first in South Sinai, a popular tourist destination which has been mostly quiet for years.
Attackers also targeted the compound housing Egypt’s main satellite earth station in Maadi, a suburb south of Cairo, firing at least two rocket-propelled grenades.
“We are expecting worse,” a senior security official told the Associated Press.
Also on Monday, a panel of judges recommended dissolving the Brotherhood’s political wing, the Freedom and Justice Party, signaling a wider crackdown on the group.
Their recommendations will be delivered to a Cairo court reviewing a case demanding the party’s dissolution on October 19.
Thousands of Morsi supporters have been killed, and more than 2,000 imprisoned, in the three months since his ouster.
No comments:
Post a Comment