A police officer and a soldier have been shot dead near Cairo just a
day after suspected Islamic State militants were killed while attempting
to launch an assault on tourists at an Egyptian holiday resort.
The incident on Saturday took place in the Giza area, on the edge of
the country’s capital, while the two men were travelling in a car. They
came under fire by unidentified armed men, the interior ministry said.
The attack occurred as the country’s tourism minister, Hisham Zazou,
prepared to visit the victims of an attack at a hotel on the Red Sea.
Three tourists – two Austrians and a Swede – were wounded on Friday
afternoon when two men armed with knives launched an assault
on the Bella Vista hotel in Hurghada. A hospital official identified
them as Renata and Wilhelm Weisslein, both 72, and Sammie Olovsson, 27,
and said they were all in a stable condition. Police shot dead one of
the assailants and seriously wounded the other.
Zazou said their motive remained unclear. “If someone wants to claim
that this is part of a terrorist group, it is a bit amateurish for
that,” the minister said. “They used only knives. If someone wants to
attempt really to create a terrible incident, he would not be using a
knife.”
However, security sources said the attackers, who arrived by sea,
also carried a gun and a suicide belt. A Norwegian tourist staying at
the Bella Vista said he heard at least 24 shots as the attackers moved
around the hotel. “I was in my room when I heard someone shouting. I
went out on the balcony and could see a man wave a black flag with white
writings on it. He was yelling loudly,” Jon Torp told Norway’s VG
newspaper.
No group has claimed responsibility for the attack, which came the
day after a Cairo hotel where Israeli tourists were staying was
targeted, although no one was injured. Islamic State claimed
responsibility for Thursday’s incident.
The latest spate of attacks come just months after security in the
country was called into question following the downing of a passenger
jet that had taken off from an Egyptian airport. In October, Isis
militants said they smuggled a bomb on board a Russian plane that crashed shortly after leaving Sharm el-Sheikh airport, killing more than 200 people on board.
The downing of the jet prompted Russia to suspend flights to and from
Egypt, while Britain restricted flights there. Last month Egyptian
investigators said they found no evidence of terrorism or foul play behind the crash, contradicting Russia’s view that the plane was downed by a bomb.
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