VAIDS

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Egypt launches Sinai 'Air Raids'

The BBC's Yolande Knell in al-Arish: ''Overnight aircraft were used to launch strikes against suspected militants''
Military helicopters have fired missiles on suspected Islamist militants in Touma village in the Sinai peninsula, Egyptian security officials say.
Twenty people are reported to have been killed.
The strikes came after security checkpoints were allegedly attacked by gunmen in the town of al-Arish, leaving a number of people injured.
On Sunday, militants killed 16 Egyptian border guards in the area.
After that attack, Israeli forces said they killed some of the militants who broke through into Israel.
Patrols have been stepped up in Northern Sinai, and Egypt's Rafah border crossing to Gaza has been indefinitely closed as security forces hunt the remaining attackers. Egypt is also reported to have begun sealing off the illicit smuggling tunnels into Gaza.
Operations 'ongoing'
Map
This is the first time Egypt has fired missiles in Sinai since the 1973 war with Israel, when it attempted to recapture the Sinai peninsula, security officials told Associated Press.
A Sinai army commander told Reuters news agency the army had received information that there were many militants in Touma.
"We have succeeded in entering Touma, killed 20 terrorists and destroyed three armoured cars belonging to terrorists. Operations are still ongoing," he told Reuters.
The Egyptian military also carried out helicopter attacks around an area called Sheikh Zuwaid just east of al-Arish, security officials said.
The attack came hours after three security checkpoints were attacked in al-Arish, near the Israeli border.
At least four people - including police officers and a civilian - were wounded in those attacks.
The Egyptian soldiers killed in Sunday's attack were buried on Tuesday in a funeral marked by angry calls for vengeance.
Some protesters chanted slogans against the Muslim Brotherhood, and according to witnesses, tried to assault the Islamist Prime Minister Hisham Qandil.


Charred bodies'
Both Israeli and Egyptian officials blamed Sunday's attack on Islamist militants - though Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood, the group to which President Mursi belongs, accused the Israeli spy agency Mossad of being responsible.
Israel rejected that claim as "nonsense".

On Tuesday, Israel handed Egypt six "completely charred" bodies it says are some of the militants behind Sunday's attack on the Egyptian soldiers, a medical official in al-Arish told AFP news agency. The bodies have not yet been identified.
The rising violence in the area is a test of credibility for the government of President Mursi, the BBC's Kevin Connolly says.
Israel wants tighter security in the Sinai, but it does not want that to be achieved with a large increase in numbers of Egyptian troops near its border, our correspondent adds.
Egypt's military sent extra tanks and troops into the Sinai last year, under terms that had to be agreed with Israel under the 1979 peace treaty between the two countries, which returned Sinai to Egyptian control.

Are you in the Sinai peninsula? Did you witness the incident? If you have any information to share, please get in touch using the form below.

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