Los Angeles Times

Egypt tightens security after attacks

Nine people are slain in violence aimed at government and military sites a day after deadly clashes.

- By Laura King laura.king@latimes.com Special correspond­ent Ingy Hassieb contribute­d to this report.

CAIRO — A trio of attacks against military, security and government-linked targets rattled Egypt on Monday, a day after violent street clashes on a military holiday left more than 50 people dead and at least 250 hurt

Monday’s strikes, which killed nine people, prompted emergency precaution­s at Cairo’s internatio­nal airport, the semioffici­al Ahram Online website reported. It said security was stepped up at airport entrances and exits, at the arrival and departure terminals, and on roads leading to the airport.

There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity for any of the assaults, but the interim government remains locked in conflict with Islamist groups three months after the military stepped in amid a wave of demonstrat­ions and deposed Islamist President Mohamed Morsi.

In the deadliest of the three attacks, masked assailants opened fire on a military patrol near the Suez Canal city of Ismailia, killing five soldiers and an officer who were riding in an open truck, according to state me- dia. It was the third such shooting in the area in recent days.

Earlier, a powerful bomb went off outside a security headquarte­rs in the Sinai Peninsula, killing at least three people and wounding dozens, the Interior Minis- try said. Officials initially said the blast was caused by a car bomb but later blamed it on a suicide attacker.

And in the most unusual of the strikes, a rocket-propelled grenade was fired before dawn at the main government-run communica- tions installati­on in a normally tranquil Cairo suburb, according to official media. Although damage to the compound was reported as minor, affecting only one satellite dish, it could signal determinat­ion on the part of attackers to take aim at vul- nerable civilian infrastruc­ture. That concern appeared to have prompted the tightening of security at the airport.

The Sinai blast, too, suggested a potential expansion of the scope of fighting in the rugged peninsula. The at- tack took place in the town of El Tor, in an area somewhat removed from the swath of northern Sinai where the military launched a major offensive against Islamist groups more than a month ago. It lies closer to the Red Sea tourist center of Sharm el Sheik, one of the very few parts of Egypt where a tourism free fall has been avoided.

Morsi’s followers in the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, who flooded the streets Sunday during celebratio­ns marking the anniversar­y of the 1973 war with Israel, have vowed to return to key sites Friday, the main Muslim day of prayer.

On Monday, Egyptian authoritie­s put the official death toll from Sunday’s fighting at 53 and said most had been killed by live ammunition.

In statements Monday, the resolve of both sides appeared to harden, setting the stage for a new round of violent confrontat­ions. The government described anti-army protesters as foreign agents and terrorists and said they would be dealt with harshly, while the Brotherhoo­d renewed demands for the reinstatem­ent of Morsi, the country’s first democratic­ally elected president, and said it would continue to send its followers into the streets to challenge security forces.

 ?? Mostafa Darwish ?? EGYPTIAN SOLDIERS inspect a vehicle at the site of a bombing in El Tor, a town in the Sinai Peninsula. Officials initially said the blast was caused by a car bomb, but later blamed it on a suicide attacker.
Mostafa Darwish EGYPTIAN SOLDIERS inspect a vehicle at the site of a bombing in El Tor, a town in the Sinai Peninsula. Officials initially said the blast was caused by a car bomb, but later blamed it on a suicide attacker.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States