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EGYPT: Car Bomb Explode Infront Of Police Building, 6 Policemen Injured

A car bomb wounded six Egyptian policemen on Thursday as it exploded in front of a police building in Cairo, the interior ministry said, the latest in a wave of militant attacks that has rocked Egypt.

The powerful blast in northern Cairo's district of Shubra came in the middle of the night, an AFP journalist said, as Egyptian security forces are being targeted by Islamic State jihadists waging an Islamist insurgency.

"A man suddenly stopped his car in front of the state security building, jumped out of it and fled on a motorbike that followed the car," the ministry statement said.

"The car exploded wounding six policemen."

Earlier a security official told AFP that "an attack targeted a state security building".

"The explosion partially destroyed the building," said a colleague on condition of anonymity.

The bombing came just days after President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi ratified an anti-terrorism law which critics claim gives wider powers to police, restricts human rights and muzzles the press.

No one has yet claimed responsibility for Thursday's attack, but the "Sinai Province", the Egyptian branch of the Islamic State group, regularly carries out attacks on security services as part of an insurgency that has swelled since the army's ousting of president Mohammed Morsi in July 2013.

Jihadists say their attacks are in retaliation for a police crackdown targeting Morsi supporters that has left hundreds dead and thousands jailed.

Hundreds more have been sentenced to death after speedy trials, denounced by the United Nations as "unprecedented" in recent history.

New anti-terror law

Thursday's blast comes weeks after the Islamic State claimed a car bomb attack targeting the Italian consulate in downtown Cairo on July 11, which left a passer-by dead.

That attack was the first such targeting a foreign mission in Egypt since the jihadists began their campaign against security forces two years ago.

The consulate bombing was followed by the abduction and apparent beheading of Croatian engineer Tomislav Salopek, which the Sinai Province group claimed on August 13.

Experts said the group appeared to have changed its strategy in its fight against the Egyptian authorities.


After launching spectacular attacks targeting security forces in its bastion in North Sinai in the past two years, the group is now adopting tactics similar to the main IS group in Iraq and Syria - abducting and beheading foreigners.

Salopek's abduction appeared aimed at threatening tourists and foreign employees of Western firms - two cornerstones of an economy battered by years of political unrest since the 2011 uprising that ousted then-president Hosni Mubarak.

Faced with the deadly jihadist insurgency, Sisi ratified on Sunday an anti-terrorism law boosting police and judicial powers. It also imposes hefty fines for "false" media reports on militant attacks.

Rights groups, which have accused Sisi of imposing a repressive regime, fear the new law could be used to further muzzle dissent and target critics.

The passing of the law was expedited after state prosecutor Hisham Barakat was assassinated in a car bombing in June, followed by a large-scale jihadist attack in the Sinai Peninsula days later.

The judiciary and security forces already had wide-ranging powers in tackling "terrorism", and Sisi's regime has been accused of using the battle against jihadists as a pretext for crushing dissent.

The law "increases authorities' power to impose heavy sentences, including the death penalty, for crimes under a definition of terrorism that is so broadly worded it could encompass civil disobedience," Human Rights Watch said Wednesday.

But the foreign ministry hit back at these criticisms, insisting that other countries should "respect the independence of the [Egyptian] judiciary".

Egypt 8040366237855519685

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