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News ID: 102342
Publish Date : 09 May 2022 - 21:49
After Spate of Terror Attacks

Egyptian Council Slams President for Opening Sinai to Zionist Tourists

CAIRO (MEMO/AP) – The Egyptian Revolutionary Council (ERC) has slammed President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi’s approach of “letting Zionists into Sinai without a visa, especially after the Rafah massacre, in which 300 worshippers were killed.”
The group warned of an “escalation of terror attacks in Sinai Peninsula.”
ERC’s remarks came after a recent militant attack which targeted a water pumping station east of the Suez Canal, leaving 11 soldiers dead.
“How many times have our soldiers been betrayed since the Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi took office,” ERC said on Twitter
A Daesh affiliate in Egypt claimed responsibility for the attack that targeted a water pumping station east of the Suez Canal.
At least five other soldiers were wounded in Saturday’s attack, according to the Egyptian military. It was one of the deadliest attacks on Egyptian security forces in recent years.
Thousands of people attended separate funerals for the dead Sunday.
Sisi, meanwhile, presided over a meeting of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, which includes the military’s top commanders, to discuss the consequences of the attack, his office said without offering further details.
The extremist group announced its claim of the attack in a statement carried by its Aamaq news agency. The authenticity of the statement could not be verified but it was released on Telegram as similar claims have been in the past.
The attack took place in the town of Qantara in the province of Ismailia, which stretches eastwards from the Suez Canal.
Militants attacked troops at a checkpoint guarding the pumping facility, then fled the site. The military said troops were pursuing the attackers in an isolated area of the northern Sinai Peninsula.
Egypt is battling a Daesh-led insurgency in the Sinai that intensified after the military overthrew the president in 2013. The militants have carried out scores of attacks, mainly targeting security forces and Christians.
The pace of militant attacks in Sinai’s main theater of operations and elsewhere has slowed to a trickle since February 2018, when the military launched an extensive operation in Sinai as well as parts of the Nile Delta and deserts along the country’s western border with Libya.