At Least 3 Killed In Attack On Bus Carrying Workers In Egypt’s Sinai

At least three people were killed and 17 wounded early on Monday in Egypt’s North Sinai province when suspected militants used rocket-propelled grenades to attack a bus carrying workers employed at a cement factory, security and medical sources said.

They said the bus was fired on in the city of El Arish, at the centre of a sharp rise in Islamist militant attacks in the lawless region bordering Israel and the Gaza Strip since Egypt’s President Mohamed Morsi was ousted by the military on 3 July.

According to eye witnesses, the attackers shouted “Allahu akbar!” (God is great) after the bus was hit.

Earlier on Monday, a bomb reportedly exploded in a region close to a military vehicle near the Rafah border with Israel.

A military source, however, denied to Al-Ahram Arabic news website that the attack happened in the vicinity of a vehicle owned by security forces, adding that the explosion killed a member of a “terrorist” group as he was attempting to plant explosives on El-Sheikh Zuweid road in north Sinai.

Commenting on Monday’s bus attack, Muslim Brotherhood spokesman Gehad El-Haddad said his group believes the incident was “intelligence-related” and aimed at justifying the “coup” that instigated the removal of Morsi.

El-Haddad, who has been in the public eye over the past few weeks due to his intensive comments on Egypt’s political scene, also stressed the Brotherhood “unequivocally rejects all types of violence.”

Hardline Islamist groups based in North Sinai have intensified attacks on police and soldiers over the past two years, exploiting a security and political vacuum following the 2011 uprising that ousted autocratic president Hosni Mubarak.

Confrontations between militants and Egyptian security forces have further increased since the ouster of Morsi, who hails from the Muslim Brotherhood.

On Friday, a policeman died in a militant attack on a checkpoint in Sinai, which had last week witnessed the killing of at least ten other policemen in different assaults.

Opponents of the Muslim Brotherhood have largely blamed the recurrent clashes in Sinai on the Islamic group.

Many have further linked the Brotherhood with Sinai’s militants after Mohamed El-Beltagy, one of the group’s leading figures, said in a recent interview the peninsula would see no violence the moment Morsi is reinstated.

Morsi’s overthrow was part of the armed forces’ roadmap for Egypt’s future, which was enforced following mass protests across Egypt against the former elected president.

Source : Ahram

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