Egypt
border guards killed in Sinai attack
At
least 16 officers killed and others wounded in armed attack on police
station near the border with Israel
5
August, 2012
At
least 16 Egyptian police officers have been killed and others wounded
in an armed attack on a police station in north Sinai on the border
between Egypt and Israel, authorities say.
Egyptian
state television said that an Islamist group was behind Sunday's
attack but did not give the death toll.
The
attack comes a month after armed men believed to be Islamist fighters
shot dead two Egyptian soldiers in a dawn raid in north Sinai.
Al
Jazeera's Rawya Rageh, reporting from Cairo, said border police
patrol were having their traditional meal at the end of the daily
fast during the Ramadan month when they were ambushed by masked armed
men.
The
authorities believe there could be a "large number of
casualties" but they have not given the exact figure, she said.
Mohamed
Morsi, Egypt's president, called for an urgent meeting with the
country's military, his party said on its Facebook page.
A
senior security official, speaking on condition of anonymity because
he was not allowed to speak to reporters, said seven other guards
were wounded in the attack.
He
said the attackers seized an armoured vehicle before driving away.
Israel
pursues attackers
Israel
said the attackers commandeered two Egyptian vehicles and tried to
storm its border.
One
of the vehicles exploded and the second was targeted by Israeli
aircraft, Avital Leibovich, a military spokeswoman, said, adding that
an unspecified number of the assailants were killed while trying to
escape.
Ofir
Gendelman, Israeli government spokesman, said seven attackers were
killed, four on the Israeli side and three in Egypt.
She
said Israeli soldiers were combing the area for other assailants who
might still be on the Israeli side of the border. The military
instructed Israeli civilians to stay inside their homes.
Ehud
Barak, Israel's defence minister, said the attack showed need for
"determined Egyptian action" to impose security and
"prevent terror in Sinai".
In
a statement, Hamas, the Palestinian group controlling the Gaza Strip
near Sinai, condemned the attack, calling it an "ugly crime"
and extended "deep condolences to the families of the victims
and to the leadership and the people of Egypt".
Marginalised
Bedouin
The
Sinai is home to Egypt's Red Sea resorts, a source of lucrative
tourist income, and is also where the country's Bedouin, who were
long marginalised under the regime of fallen president Hosni Mubarak,
are based.
Before
the July attack, Islamist fighters had distributed pamphlets calling
on the army, brought in to restore security, to leave the lawless
north of the peninsula.
The
attack was in Sheikh Zuwaid, a town roughly 15km west of the Gaza
Strip.
The
military sent tanks and soldiers into the region last year to quell
Islamist fighters, after receiving permission from Israel.
Under
a 1979 peace treaty with Israel, Egypt should have a limited military
presence in the area.
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