At Least 30 Police Officers Killed in Shootout in Egypt’s Western Desert: Security Sources

At Least 30 Police Officers Killed in Shootout in Egypt’s Western Desert: Security Sources
Breaking News
Reuters
10/20/2017
Updated:
10/20/2017
CAIRO—Armed terrorists killed at least 30 policemen in a shootout during a raid on a suspected terrorist hideout in Egypt’s Western desert, security sources said on Friday.

A number of suspected terrorists were also killed and security forces are combing the area, a statement by the Interior Ministry said.

Egypt is facing an Islamic insurgency concentrated in the Sinai peninsula from two main groups, including an ISIS terrorist group affiliate, that has killed hundreds of security forces since 2013.

Islamic terrorists have launched several major attacks, most recently targeting churches in Cairo and other cities with the loss of dozens of lives.

The security sources said authorities were following a lead to a hideout deep in the desert thought to house eight suspected members of Hasm, a group which has claimed several attacks around the capital targeting judges and police since last year.

A convoy of four SUVs and one interior ministry vehicle was ambushed from higher ground by terrorists firing rocket-propelled grenades and detonating explosive devices, a senior source in the Giza Security Office said.

The number of dead was expected to rise, two security sources said.

Two security sources said eight security personnel were injured in the clashes, while another source said that four of the injured were police and four others suspected terrorists.

Egypt accuses Hasm of being the terrorist wing of the Muslim Brotherhood, an Islamic group it outlawed in 2013. The Muslim Brotherhood denies this.

The Islamic insurgency in the Sinai peninsula has grown since the military overthrew President Mohamed Mursi of the Muslim Brotherhood in mid-2013 following mass protests against his rule.

The terrorist group staging the insurgency pledged allegiance to Islamic State in 2014. It is blamed for the killing of hundreds of soldiers and policemen and has started to target other areas, including Egypt’s Christian Copts.
By Ahmed Mohamed Hassan