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Daesh claims missile attack on Egypt navy boat

By AFP - Jul 16,2015 - Last updated at Jul 16,2015

A picture shows an Egyptian naval vessel approaching another army boat on fire on the maritime border between Egypt and the Palestinian Gaza Strip, off the coast of Rafah in southern Gaza, on Thursday (AFP photo)

CAIRO — The Daesh terror group said it carried out a missile attack on an Egyptian navy vessel off North Sinai on Thursday, the first such incident in a two-year insurgency.

The group's Egyptian affiliate claimed it fired a "guided missile" at the patrol boat north of Rafah, which neighbours the Gaza Strip, in a statement posted on one of its social media accounts.

It posted three pictures showing what appeared to be a guided anti-tank missile striking the vessel and causing a large fireball.

The military had earlier said one of its boats came under attack and was set on fire while pursuing militants, but that it suffered no losses.

Other navy boats rescued the crew as their vessel spewed a plume of smoke, said an AFP photographer across the border in the Gaza Strip.

They boarded the vessel, which stayed afloat, to extinguish the flames.

Jihadists loyal to Daesh have killed scores of Egyptian soldiers and policemen in the Sinai Peninsula since the army's overthrow of Islamist president Mohamed Morsi in 2013.

The militants have also carried out attacks west of the Suez Canal, which separates the Sinai from the rest of Egypt.

The army said on Wednesday its troops foiled a suicide car bombing of a military post between Cairo and Suez that was claimed by Daesh’s affiliate in Egypt.

Thursday’s attack, if confirmed, could be the Sunni extremist group’s first maritime attack.

In November 2014, the Egyptian military said eight navy men drowned after one of its patrol boats came under attack off the country’s northern coast. But it has released no further details.

The jihadists in Egypt have carried out a series of brazen attacks despite a massive crackdown by the army which says it has killed more than 1,100 militants in Sinai since Morsi’s overthrow.

The jihadists in Sinai, who pledged loyalty to Daesh in November, struck a series of military outposts and checkpoints on July 1 that killed at least 21 soldiers.

They also claimed responsibility for a car bomb attack on the Italian consulate in Cairo last week.

The bombing occurred in the early morning, when the consulate was closed, and killed an Egyptian civilian.

The government on Thursday sacked the police chief in Cairo following that and other attacks in the capital.

Last month, the country’s top prosecutor was killed in a car bombing on his way to work in the city, prompting a furious President Abdel Fattah Al Sisi to pledge tougher anti-terrorism laws.

Sisi, the former army chief who toppled Morsi, had won elections in 2014 pledging to stamp out militant Islamists.

Since Morsi’s overthrow, at least 1,400 people, mostly Islamists, have been killed in a police crackdown on protests. 

 

Thousands have been imprisoned and hundreds sentenced to death, including Morsi himself. Most of them have won retrials.

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