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Egypt guns down blast ‘suspects’

Egyptian security forces kill 40 suspected militants after four die in bombing of Vietnamese tourist bus.

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GIzA: Egyptian police killed 40 alleged “terrorists” in a crackdown after a roadside bomb hit a tour bus claiming the lives of three Vietnamese holidaymak­ers and an Egyptian guide.

The suspects were killed in separate raids in the Giza governorat­e, home to Egypt’s famed pyramids and the scene of Friday’s deadly bombing, and in the restive Sinai Peninsula, the interior ministry said.

Two raids in the Giza governorat­e killed 30 “terrorists”, while the remaining 10 were killed in North Sinai, the ministry said in a statement.

It said the authoritie­s acted after receiving informatio­n the suspects were preparing a spate of attacks against state and tourist institutio­ns and churches.

“Informatio­n was received by the national security that a group of terrorists were planning to carry out a series of aggressive attacks targeting state institutio­ns, particular­ly economic ones, as well as tourism, armed forces, police and Christian places of worship,” the statement said.

A roadside bomb hit a tour bus in the Al-Haram district near the Giza pyramids early Friday evening, killing the three Vietnamese holidaymak­ers and their Egyptian guide, officials said.

A statement from the public prosecutor’s office said 11 other tourists from Vietnam and an Egyptian bus driver were wounded.

There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity for the bombing, the first attack to target tourists since 2017.

Saigon Tourist, the tour company that organised the trip, said the Vietnamese tourists were “on their way to a restaurant for dinner” when the bomb exploded.

Company officials were heading to Cairo and plans were made to allow some relatives of the victims to also fly to Egypt.

One of those heading to Cairo was Nguyen Nguyen Vu whose sister Nguyen Thuy Quynh, 56, died in the bombing, while her husband, Le Duc Minh, was wounded.

The couple, both aged 56, were in the seafood business and holidaying in Egypt when the tragedy occurred, Quynh’s younger brother said.

“We were all very shocked... My sister and her husband trav- el quite a lot and they were quite experience­d in travelling abroad.

“Their hobby was travelling,” Vu said.

He said he was applying for a visa for Egypt and hoped to travel as soon as possible.

“Our wish is that we could bring my sister back home, and I hope that I can settle things within the next two to three days.”

Friday’s deadly bombing was the latest blow to Egypt’s vital tourism industry, which has been reeling from the turmoil set off by the 2011 uprising that forced veteran president Hosni Mubarak from power. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Senseless violence: Security forces standing near the tourist bus that was attacked in Giza, Cairo. — AFP
Senseless violence: Security forces standing near the tourist bus that was attacked in Giza, Cairo. — AFP

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