Members of the Egyptian army at a past event. At least 35 police and
troops were killed in a clash with Islamist fighters in the Bahariya
oasis in the country's Western Desert on October 21, 2017. AFP PHOTO |
KHALED DESOUKI
CAIRO
At least 35 Egyptian
troops and police officers were killed in clashes with Islamist fighters
in the Bahariya oasis in the country's Western Desert on Friday,
security and medical sources said.
An interior ministry
statement confirmed the incident and said some of the attackers had
died, without giving any figures for casualties or further details.
Security
forces, who are hunting down Islamic militants in the region, were
ambushed late Friday on a road to the Bahariya oasis, some 200
kilometers southeast of Cairo, according to the interior ministry
statement.
ROCKET FIRE
According
to a source close to the security services, the convoy was hit by
rocket fire. The attackers also used explosive devices.
There
has not yet been a claim of responsibility. A false claim by the small
extremist group Hasm, reported by multiple local media, spread on social
media soon after the attack.
But the group's official Twitter feed, where it routinely shares statements, has been dormant since October 2.
Since
the army removed President Mohamed Morsi, of the Muslim Brotherhood,
extremist groups have increased their attacks on the country's military
and police.
The Brotherhood, once Egypt's largest opposition movement, has long denied involvement in violence.
MASS PROTESTS
Mohamed
Morsi was elected as Egypt's first civilian president in 2012, but the
army overthrew him a year later following mass protests against the
divisive Islamist's rule.
Since then, an extensive
crackdown on the group has left it in disarray with competing wings that
have disagreed on whether to use violence, after police quashed their
protests.
Analysts say a section of the Brotherhood has encouraged armed assaults against policemen in Egypt.
Hasm has claimed multiple attacks since 2016 on police, officials and judges in Cairo.
In their statements, none of the militant groups claim any affiliation to the Muslim Brotherhood.
JIHADIST
Authorities
have also been fighting the Egyptian branch of the jihadist group
Islamic State, which has increased its attacks in the north of the Sinai
peninsula.
Hundreds of soldiers and police have been killed in the violence.
The
Islamic State group's deadly attacks on the military and police include
a recent assault on a checkpoint in Sinai on July 7 that killed at
least 21 soldiers.
The group has maintained a steady war of attrition with sniper attacks and roadside bombings.
But
unlike their parent organisation in Iraq and Syria, they have been
unable to seize population centres in the peninsula bordering Israel and
Gaza.
In October 2015, IS claimed the bombing of a
Russian airliner carrying holidaymakers from the popular South Sinai
resort of Sharm el-Sheikh, killing all 224 people on board.
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