IS claims responsibility for car bombing
Updated: 2015-08-21 07:40
By Agencies in Cairo(China Daily)
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Extremist group says attack on state security building was reprisal for execution of 6
Islamic State's Egyptian affiliate said it was behind a car bombing that wounded 29 people near a state security building and courthouse in a Cairo suburb early on Thursday.
A statement circulated on Twitter by supporters of the group, Sinai province, said the bomb was a reprisal for the execution of six of its members convicted of carrying out an attack north of the Egyptian capital last year.
"Let the apostates of the police and army, the followers of Jews, know we are a people who do not forget our revenge," the statement said.
The statement also said the "soldiers of the caliphate" targeted the building north of Cairo with a parked car bomb.
In May, Egypt executed six members of Sinai province for attacking soldiers near Cairo in 2014. The men were convicted on charges which included carrying out an attack in which two army officers were killed in Arab Sharkas village north of Cairo.
Sinai province has killed hundreds of soldiers and police since the military toppled former president Mohammed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood in 2013 after mass protests against his rule.
Security sources who inspected the site of the blast in Shubra al-Khaima near Cairo said there was a burned-out vehicle and crater.
Comments on Twitter indicated the blast, which heavily damaged the face of the state security building, was heard in several parts of the Egyptian capital.
Shopkeeper Mohamed Ali said he saw a man park a vehicle that exploded after he stepped away from it.
Militants based in Sinai who support Islamic State, which controls parts of Iraq and Syria and has a presence in Egypt's neighbor Libya, have proved resilient despite military operations against them.
Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi has vowed to eradicate militancy, which he has said is an existential threat to the Arab world and the West.
Stabilizing Egypt is critical to efforts to rebuild an economy hurt by turmoil since the 2011 uprising that toppled then-president Hosni Mubarak.
Reuters - AP
A security official guards the site of a bomb blast at a state security building in Shubra Al-Khaima, on the outskirts of Cairo, on Thursday. Mohamed Abd El Ghany / Reuters |
(China Daily 08/21/2015 page11)
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