AFP

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi pledged “retribution” after two police officers were killed defusing bombs outside his Cairo palace yesterday, almost a year after he overthrew his predecessor.

An Islamist militant group, one of several that have carried out attacks since president Mohamed Mursi’s ouster on July 3 last year, warned several days ago that it had planted bombs near the east Cairo palace.

It was not immediately clear whether Sisi, who was the defence minister when he toppled Mursi and then won a May presidential election, was in the Ittihadiya palace at the time.

Sisi pledged “retribution” in a prerecorded speech aired yesterday evening to mark the anniversary of mass protests against Mursi last year that prompted the military led by Sisi to oust him three days later.

The interior ministry said a colonel was killed and several other policemen wounded when a bomb they were trying to defuse went off.

Almost an hour later, as policemen cordoned off the area and tried to defuse a second bomb, it too detonated, killing a lieutenant colonel and wounding several other officers. 

A paramedic’s hand was blown off by the blast and blood spattered over a nearby white police van.

A disposal robot moved a third bomb to the middle of the street, where sappers safely defused it.

Attacks by militants have killed almost 500 police and soldiers since Mursi’s overthrow and incarceration, according to the government.

Last Wednesday, five small bombs went off in Cairo metro stations, wounding five people, followed by two bombs on Saturday in a telecommunication tower that killed a watchman’s wife and daughter. 

The number of attacks has fallen in recent months after police killed or arrested dozens of suspected militants.

But a brazen statement by a militant group saying it had planted bombs near the palace suggested the militants still have the ability to strike heavily guarded installations.

“God has allowed our heroic soldiers to penetrate the fortifications of the mass murderer’s lair in Ittihadiya palace” to plant bombs, the Ajnad Misr militant group said on Friday, referring to Sisi.

In his speech, Sisi vowed the militants would be punished.

“Today, we lost new martyrs. I pledge before God and their families, the state will get just and speedy retribution,” Sisi said.

The militant group—which the interior ministry had claimed had been defeated—said it had not set off the bombs to avoid civilian casualties and warned passersby to stay away from the palace.

Sisi, whom Mursi had appointed as defence minister during his single turbulent year in power, has pledged to crack down on the militants.

He won the May election with 97% of the vote against a weak leftist candidate on a platform of providing strong leadership to restore stability.

He was the de facto leader even before his election victory, and the Islamists blame him for a brutal crackdown that has killed at least 1,400 people in street clashes since Mursi’s overthrow.

The authorities have blamed Mursi’s Muslim Brotherhood for militant attacks, a charge the group denies, and designated it a terrorist organisation in December.

The Islamists say they renounced violence decades ago and are committed to peaceful protest.

A Brotherhood-led coalition, the Anti-Coup Alliance, said yesterday it would hold a “day of rage” on July 3, the anniversary of Mursi’s overthrow.

The Islamists have held near daily rallies that have grown ever smaller amid the relentless police crackdown.

At least 16,000 Islamists and suspected allies have been arrested, with about 200 sentenced to death in speedy mass trials.

They include Muslim Brotherhood leader Mohamed Badie. Mursi himself faces several trials on charges which could see him sentenced to death if convicted.

 

 

 

 

 

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