Egypt Closes Rafah Crossing after Sinai Attack
إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربيةMilitants killed 25 Egypt police Monday in the deadliest attack of its kind in years, as the country struggles to deal with a crisis sparked by the ouster of president Mohammed Morsi.
Sources said militants fire rocket-propelled grenades at two buses carrying police in the Sinai Peninsula, just hours after Egypt's military chief vowed a "forceful" response to violence roiling the Arab world's most populous nation.
The attack raised fears of a return to the wave of deadly Islamist violence that swept Egypt in the 1990s.
It comes as the country struggles to put a lid on a deep political crisis and bloodshed that has left almost 800 people dead in days of clashes between Islamist protesters and security forces throughout Egypt.
Among those killed in the latest violence were 36 Islamist detainees who died in police custody overnight, with authorities saying they had suffocated on tear gas fired after they took a police officer hostage.
Morsi's supporters vowed new demonstrations on Monday, but a day earlier they had cancelled several marches citing security concerns.
The Sinai attack left at least two other policemen injured, with unknown militants firing on buses carrying police as they headed towards the town of Rafah on the border with the Palestinian Gaza Strip.
The interior ministry blamed the attacks on "armed terrorist groups," and a border official said shortly afterwards that the Rafah border crossing would be closed.
The security situation in the Sinai Peninsula has deteriorated sharply since the army ousted Morsi on July 3, with near daily attacks by militants targeting police and military installations.
Elsewhere in the country, bloodshed sparked by the August 14 security force crackdown on pro-Morsi protest camps showed little sign of abating.
Authorities said 36 Islamist detainees died after police fired tear gas in a bid to free a police officer taken hostage by prisoners.
But the Muslim Brotherhood, the once-banned movement from which Morsi hailed, held the police accountable.
"The murder of 35 detained anti-coup protestors affirms the intentional violence aimed at opponents of the coup, and the cold-blooded killing of which they are targets," it said in a statement in English.
The deaths of the detainees came hours after military chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi warned that security forces would confront any violence from protesters.
"We will never be silent in the face of the destruction of the country," said Sisi, who overthrew Morsi on July 3 after protests against the Islamist president's rule.
"We are very prepared for this," he said, pledging a "forceful" response to further attacks on police stations and government buildings.
Morsi loyalists said they would hold new marches on Monday, but cancelled several a day earlier, citing fears of violence by security forces and vigilantes.
According to an AFP tally, more than 1,000 people have been killed since mass demonstrations against Morsi erupted at the end of June, among them a son of the Brotherhood's supreme guide who died on Friday.
The violence sparked by the August 14 crackdown has drawn international condemnation and EU leaders have warned the bloc will "urgently review" ties with Cairo in the coming days.
European ambassadors were recalled from their summer break for an emergency meeting in Brussels.
The European Union has pledged nearly five billion euros ($6.7 billion) in aid to Egypt but the bloc has cautioned this too was under "constant review" after Morsi's ouster.
French President Francois Hollande said after a meeting with the Saudi foreign minister: "It is unacceptable that there is violence of this level in a great country like Egypt."
The United States has announced the cancellation of its biannual military exercise with Egypt, and its embassy in Cairo was closed Sunday for security reasons.
The White House has stopped short of suspending $1.3 billion in annual aid, although some U.S. lawmakers called Sunday for the funds to be cut.
But the international response has not been uniformly critical. Both Saudi Arabia and Jordan have said they back Egypt in its fight against "terrorism".
In the 1990s, Egypt was hit by major attacks linked to Islamist groups such as Gamaa Islamiyya and the Islamic Jihad, with targets including government officials and security forces, Coptic Christians and the country's vital tourism industry.
One of the deadliest attacks took place in 1997 when militants struck the mortuary temple of Queen Hatshepsut in the tourist haven of Luxor, killing 58 holidaymakers.
What exactly, except in your warped mind, does all this terror in Sinai have to do with Israel?
You and your ali baba nasrallah should be shot on sight in south Lebanon and everywhere they are found... Dahieh included... no mercy for you...
Southern - I'm so pleased that you have decided where I live. Will you now please also tell me exactly what I have to do in order to pick up "my Israeli" ID card and passport.
I am not going to go into my personal details once again. I'm sure that you have read and ignored them previously.
You are the typical type of person who if the issue is about something in the Middle East, and the other person does not agree with your point of view, then he must be Israeli.
By the way, "Israel is the enemy", of whom? Please remember, in contrast to the Republic of Lebanon, the Arab Republic of Egypt HAS signed a peace treaty with Israel. So there, Israel is not the enemy.
Tough Comments phillipo & Southern.
Israel has caused a great deal of damage to Lebanon & Lebanese; and any peace treaty would entail a genuine and fair treaty that would return all Lands, Water, respect for EEZ between Lebanon and Israel. Then we would be able to see the 5 lane highway Beyrouth - Tel Aviv. Till Israel respects Lebanon's sovereignty, natural resources, land, water... then a peace treaty can happen.
Incidentally, I think, and I think many would agree, that on the ground, Lebanese & Israelis would have the most authentic curiosity towards each other.
Egyptians, Jordanian... yes, they do have a peace treaty 'on paper'... but they hate each other to the bone. Where as Lebanese and Israelis... have a lot in common... Ask any Lebanese and Israeli outside the Middle East!
I think many in Lebanon would like to see a fair peace treaty... but again... it would have to be fair.
"Incidentally, I think, and I think many would agree, that on the ground, Lebanese & Israelis would have the most authentic curiosity towards each other."
I think I am in agreement with this statement for reasons I will not mention.
So in order to find out just how close the positions of the Governments of Lebanon and Israel really are, why doesn't the Government of Lebanon declare that they are willing to open talks, at any level, with Israel, immediately. If you don't talk you won't know what the other side thinks.
phillipo, it's quite difficult that one though.
The primary reason being the 12 or so Palestinian camps and the dangers they'd pose for obvious reasons and by obvious means.
Also, Israel should extend its arms in peace first, as the Lebanese are quite hesitant in that regard due to various and many abuses of sovereignty it has enacted against Lebanon(border violations, occupation, funneling precious water, questions about borders beyond land, civil war memories, and so on). Realistically, I don't see it happening for at least 5-10 years.
endless "Also, Israel should extend its arms in peace first,"
When exactly did Israel declare war of the Republic of Lebanon. It extended its arms in 1988 when both countries sat down and drew up a draft treaty only to have it torn up by the Syrian occupiers of Lebanon.
It is about time that those talks were renewed.
Also remember for many years after 1948 there were ongoing talks between military leaders at Ras al-Nakourah - Rosh Hanikrah. Talks which kept the border very quiet until the advent of Hisballah.
phillipo, you're succumbing to the Lebanese political disease of not going forward by referencing history and past events. Figureheads have changed, politics has changed, the world, in its entirety, has changed. Any notion of trust or mistrust that was accrued between Lebanese or Israeli politicians has vanished more or less. Fresh memories are only limited to Israeli transgressions. Israel has also destroyed directly or indirectly Lebanon more in the Lebanese civil war than most. My premise remains the same in that Israel for these reasons should be the one to placate and alleviate the doubts, hesitance, and pertinent wounds of its frightened and fragile neighbor next door.
Your last statement is also true, though the reasons for its rise to prominence are obvious(e.g. occupation and to a lesser extent, the Palestinian cause--lesser because everyone's pretty much involved in it because in actuality--it's a national problem their presence). It is exactly for that reason I reasoned that peace is some 5-10 years ahead, as the force in question would hopefully subside into at the very most a political party.
Endless & the fool, Feel free to start now. I agree with Endless and therefore I'm raising a peaceful hand towards you. Are you ok to talk to your southern neighbour...?
Arik Tel-Aviv