Friday, January 24, 2014

Egypt violence: Deadly blasts hit police in Cairo

BBC News online -- 24 January 2014
Orla Guerin at the scene of one of the attacks: ''A huge crater was left after the blast''
Six people have been killed and some 100 others wounded in a series of explosions in the Egyptian capital, Cairo. 

A powerful car bomb exploded outside the police headquarters in central Cairo on Friday morning, killing four people and wounding at least 76.

Hours later, there were three more blasts elsewhere in the city, killing two people and injuring several more.

The attacks come on the eve of the third anniversary of the 2011 uprising.
The revolution forced the country's decades-long ruler Hosni Mubarak to resign.

Analysis

The multiple blasts which hit different parts of Cairo appear to be a systematic plan. The attackers managed to hit hard at the heart of the Egyptian capital, close to the police headquarters and the museum of Islamic art.
While the police HQ was the most significant target, another blast near a metro station struck one of the most crowded means of transportation in the city.
Friday is a day off in Egypt, otherwise the effects of this second explosion would have been much worse. A third bomb went off near the Giza pyramids with no damage or casualties reported.
It is not just about the size of all these blasts but rather about the timing, coming on the eve of the third anniversary of the revolution which toppled Hosni Mubarak.
The minister of interior has repeatedly emphasised that his forces are quite ready to deal with any trouble during this anniversary, but what happened today raises a lot of questions about what the authorities can actually do.
An al-Qaeda-inspired militant group Ansar Beit al-Maqdis (Champions of Jerusalem) has said it carried out the attack on the police headquarters.

The group previously claimed responsibility for a car bomb attack on a security building in the northern city of Mansoura in December that killed 16 people and injured more than 100 others.
The authorities blamed the Muslim Brotherhood for that attack - something the group strongly denied - and declared it a terrorist group shortly afterwards.

An angry group gathered outside the bombed police headquarters, accusing the Islamist movement of being behind Friday's attacks. Some shouted "Death to the Muslim Brotherhood".
The Muslim Brotherhood condemned what it called the "cowardly bombings".

The police headquarters was hit by a powerful blast at about 06:30 local time (04:30 GMT). Black smoke could be seen rising over the city soon after.

Egyptian Interior Minister Muhammad Ibrahim said it appeared to be the work of a suicide bomber.
"A pick-up truck had two passengers inside, stopped outside the security cordon, and the suicide bomber blew himself up," he said.

Scene of car bomb blast in Cairo on 24 January 2014 The police headquarters and neighbouring buildings were badly damaged in the first, most powerful blast (Photos by BBC Arabic's Mohamed Assad)
Scene of car bomb blast in Cairo on 24 January 2014 The first attack was also the deadliest, killing four people and wounding some 76
Scene of car bomb blast in Cairo on 24 January 2014 The interior minister said it was believed to be the work of a suicide bomber
Scene of car bomb blast in Cairo on 24 January 2014 Police are on heightened alert already, with demonstrations expected ahead of Saturday's anniversary of the start of the 2011 uprising
Map showing blast sites
Gunfire was reportedly heard soon after the blast, and more than 30 ambulances raced to the scene.
The blast left a huge crater and caused extensive damage to the front of the building.

Ansar Beit al-Maqdis

  • Al-Qaeda-inspired Salafist jihadist group based in Sinai
  • Name means Champions of Jerusalem
  • Has claimed responsibility for recent deadly attacks around Egypt, and rocket attacks on Israel
  • Group said it was behind bombing of police station in Mansoura in Dec 2013 which killed 16 people
The nearby 19th Century Islamic art museum was also damaged. "The building has been destroyed from the outside, but with regards to the antiquities we'll have to wait and see until we can carry out a thorough inspection," said Antiquities Minister Mohamed Ibrahim.

The BBC's Orla Guerin, reporting from Cairo, says the security directorate is a very significant target and should have been one of the best protected buildings in the city.

As people in Cairo were taking in news of the blast, a second explosion occurred in the Dokki district of the capital.

One person was killed and 15 were wounded in a blast that, according to one report, targeted police vehicles near the metro station.

A short while later, officials said a third device had been set off beside a police station near the famous Giza pyramids. No-one was hurt.

Reaction from Egypt

"This is a cowardly act of terrorism. The masterminds of those explosions should be held accountable," Ayman Nour, leader of the liberal Ghad al-Thawra Party, on Twitter.
"The masterminds of the explosion are aiming to defame our revolution against the military coup," a Muslim Brotherhood leader, Magdi Karkar, on the Freedom and Justice website.
"And so the blasts will necessitate more crackdowns, and the crackdowns will justify more blasts, ad infinitum," pro-Muslim Brotherhood activist Iyad El-Baghdadi on Twitter, in English.
"This evil attack will not stop the fierce war that is being waged by the police on cowardly terrorism," security expert Rif'at Abdel Hamid on private ON TV Live.

Some hours later, state television reported a fourth explosion outside a cinema in the Giza district of the city. One person was killed, officials said.

The attacks come at a tense time, with security forces already on heightened alert ahead of the anniversary of the start of the uprising against Mubarak, our correspondent says.

The interior minister said security is being stepped up around the squares where people are expected to gather to mark Saturday's anniversary.

"We have a plan to secure all of this for the anniversary of the 25 January revolution," Mr Ibrahim said. "I am telling the people not to be afraid and go down."

The Muslim Brotherhood and its partners had been planning demonstrations after Friday prayers across the country. It was not clear if they would go ahead.

Supporters of the Muslim Brotherhood are angry at the army's overthrow of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi last July - a year after he became Egypt's first democratically elected leader.
Although the group has now been banned, interim Prime Minister Hazem Beblawi said any member could take part in forthcoming elections under certain conditions.

"He accepts the new constitution... refuses the use of force and he accepts the idea of a secular government, democratic one, open, no discrimination, no mixing of religion and politics, and accepting human rights," Mr Beblawi said in a BBC interview before the attacks.

Amnesty International on Thursday condemned the military-backed government's period in office as one of "unprecedented" violence. It accused troops of regularly committing abuses and said rights and liberties in the country were being eroded.

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