CAIRO (AP) --
A drive-by shooting killed six Egyptian soldiers east of Cairo on
Monday, shortly after a massive car bombing hit the security
headquarters in a town near the tourist resorts of southern Sinai,
killing three policemen and wounding dozens.
Also
Monday, at least two rocket propelled grenades slammed into a compound
housing the country's main satellite earth station in a southern Cairo
suburb, security officials said.
The attacks
came a day after dozens were killed when holiday celebrations marking
the start of the 1973 Mideast war turned into deadly clashes across
Egypt, though it was not immediately clear if Monday's violence was
related.
A radical Muslim Salafi group had
threatened in a statement last Friday that it would kill anyone who
collaborated with the military's ongoing offensive against militants in
northern Sinai, but neither the group - nor any other radical factions -
claimed responsibility for any of the attacks on Monday.
The
dawn attack on the earth station in the leafy suburb of Maadi in Cairo
caused only minor damage to one of the giant satellite dishes in the
complex. But its significance was far wider, in part because it struck
at the heart of the nation's telecommunications center, making it the
most serious attack in the capital since last month's assassination
attempt against the country's interior minister outside his home in
eastern Cairo.
A senior security official at the site said the attack did not disrupt communications, but acknowledged its "brazen" nature.
"We
are expecting worse," predicted the official, speaking on condition of
anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.
In
the attack east of Cairo, the six soldiers, including a lieutenant,
were on patrol in a pickup truck near the Suez Canal city of Ismailia
when masked gunmen in another vehicle opened fire, killing all of them,
said security officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they
were not authorized to talk to the media.
The
southern Sinai explosion at the security headquarter in the town of
el-Tor killed at least three policemen and wounded 55, signaling what
could be the spread of attacks by Islamic militants, already active in
northern Sinai.
Near-daily attacks against
security forces and soldiers in the volatile northern Sinai Peninsula
have increasingly resembled a full-fledged insurgency, especially in the
three months since the ouster of Egypt's Islamist President Mohammed
Morsi.
But the region of southern Sinai, which
includes the popular diving resort of Sharm el-Sheikh, has been mostly
quiet since a series of deadly attacks in 2005 and 2006.
The
four-story building of the security headquarters sustained serious
damage and the officials said the blast was caused by a car bomb
detonated by remote control. Among the wounded was a top police
commander.
Monday's attacks come a day after
at least 51 people were killed in clashes across Egypt between security
forces, and civilians on one side, and Morsi's supporters on the other
side. At least 40 of those killed were in Cairo, where some
neighborhoods saw hours of pitched street battles between police and
protesters. The fighting left streets looking like combat zones, with
fires burning, black smoke rising and the air thick with tear gas. Most
of those killed were Morsi's supporters.
Sunday's
death toll and Monday's attacks constituted the latest chapter in the
turmoil roiling Egypt since the ouster in February 2011 of autocrat
Hosni Mubarak.
The violence is certain to set
back efforts by the interim, military-backed government to revive the
economy, especially the vital tourism sector, and bring order to the
streets of Cairo, where crime and lawlessness have been rife.
Morsi's
supporters vowed in a statement Monday to continue their protests,
saying their movement will go on, "fuelled by the precious blood and
souls of the noble martyrs." They called for new rallies on Tuesday and
Friday.
Morsi was Egypt's first civilian and
first freely elected president, succeeding four since the early 1950s
who hailed from a military background. But after a year in office, Morsi
was faced by massive protests demanding his ouster, accusing his Muslim
Brotherhood of taking over power - and on July 3, military chief Gen.
Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi removed him.
The
military is now back as the real source of power in Egypt, and state and
independent media have been depicting it as the country's savior - with
growing calls for el-Sissi to run in the presidential election due
early next year.
The government has since the
popularly backed coup detained at least 2,000 Brotherhood members,
including most of the group's leaders. It says the detainees would face
trial on charges that range from murder and inciting violence to abuse
of power and conspiring with foreign powers.
But Islamic radicals, at least in Sinai, are determined to exact revenge.
"To
all who are dealing with the army forces, forwarding information to
them or spying for their account ... we tell them: `You are taking part
in a war against Islam and Muslims, and you are fighting God and his
Prophet'," said the Salafiyah Jihadiya group in its statement, posted on
militant Web sites.
---
Associated Press reporter Sarah El Deeb contributed to this report in Cairo.
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