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Seven Egyptian policemen killed in Sinai bomb attack

By Reuters - Jan 09,2017 - Last updated at Jan 09,2017

A pickup truck, filled with a family belongings, leaves the border area in northern Sinai, where authorities are battling insurgents on the highway between El Arish and the border town of Rafah, Egypt, May 25, 2015 (Reuters photo)

CAIRO — At least seven policemen and one civilian were killed in a bomb attack on a checkpoint in the northern Sinai city of El Arish on Monday, and five of the attackers were also killed, the Egyptian interior ministry said.

Security and medical sources told Reuters earlier that eight policemen were killed.

The attackers planted a bomb in a street cleaning vehicle they had stolen a few days earlier, security sources told Reuters. After the bomb exploded, attackers fired guns and rocket-propelled grenades at the checkpoint, the sources said.

The interior ministry said the attack was carried out by a group of around 20 men who had used RPGs and a vehicle bomb. Security forces had detonated the bomb before it reached the checkpoint, and had killed five of the attackers and wounded three others.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack, which also wounded 13 people, including four civilians. Police found the body of one of the attackers behind the wheel of the vehicle that exploded.

An Islamist insurgency in the Sinai Peninsula has gained pace since the military toppled President Mohamed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt's oldest Islamist movement, in 2013 following mass protests against him.

The militant group behind the insurgency pledged allegiance to Daesh in 2014 and called itself Sinai Province. It is blamed for killing hundreds of soldiers and police since then.

In November, Daesh claimed responsibility for an attack on a checkpoint that killed 15 soldiers.

 

In a November issue of its weekly online magazine, Al Nabaa, Daesh urged members to join other branches of the group in areas like Sinai, Libya, Yemen and West Africa if they could not travel to its self-declared "caliphate" in Iraq and Syria.

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