
Two militants and one civilian killed in Cairo anti-terror raid, Egypt says
The raid also resulted in the death of one civilian and injury to a police officer during clashes between the suspects and police.
Following the raid on their hideout in Giza 's Bulaq Dakrour district, the two suspects opened fire on security forces, the ministry said, adding that the pair were killed by police shooting back.
The civilian who was killed was a passer-by. The clash and pursuit of the suspects took place in a residential area.
The ministry said the suspects belonged to Harakat Sawa'ed Misr, or the Arms of Egypt Movement, a militant organisation that has been linked to attacks on police and officials supportive of Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El Sisi.
The group is an armed wing of the now outlawed Muslim Brotherhood.
The ministry said the group, which it accused of planning new attacks on 'security and financial agencies', had been under surveillance for weeks.
The government has classified both Hasm and the Muslim Brotherhood as terrorist organisations since the ousting of former Egyptian president Mohamed Morsi in 2013.
Sunday's operation came after a video attributed to Hasm surfaced on social media on July 8, marking their return to the spotlight after years of absence.
The video showed armed men conducting military drills in a desert environment, accompanied by a statement pledging to resume operations in Egypt.
The group claimed that Egypt 'cannot remain neutral or silent', a reference to Israel's war on Gaza. It reiterated a prevailing criticism of the current Egyptian regime that it has not done enough to prevent Israel killing more than 55,000 civilians in the war, despite being deeply involved in mediation efforts.
After years of staying quiet, Hasm declared in its video that it had 'regained its strength'.
The video led to widespread debate, with some analysts questioning its authenticity and others scrutinising its timing.
Two of Egypt's most prominent fact-checking platforms, Matsada2sh and Sahih Masr, issued analyses of the video.
Matsada2sh said it could not prove the video originated on any of Hasm's social media platforms. Sahih Masr's analysis said different shots in the video resembled Egypt's western desert, while others depicted parts of Libya.
Some analysts pointed out that parts of the footage resembled scenes from a 2017 Hasm video, only with updated captions and statements. Others said it was filmed in Syria.
Al Azhar Observatory for Combating Extremism condemned the video, labelling it a 'desperate attempt' to undermine Egypt's security and stability.
The observatory argued it recycled older footage, describing it as propaganda aimed at boosting the group's image despite its diminished capabilities in recent years.
Hasm has claimed responsibility for several high-profile attacks in Egypt, including the assassination of national security officer Ibrahim Azazi and the attempted assassination of former Grand Mufti Ali Gomaa.
The group's violent activities peaked between 2014 and 2019, with their involvement in a 2019 Cairo car bombing that killed 20 people.
Though largely inactive in recent years due to intensified government crackdowns, the group's re-emergence through the July 8 video has reignited concerns over domestic security.
The Interior Ministry has accused Hasm and the larger Muslim Brotherhood of attempting to destabilise the country and attacking critical infrastructure.
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The National
3 hours ago
- The National
Does the downfall of the 'Shah of Shahs' hold lessons for the regime that deposed him?
Earlier this week Iranian exiles, including some not long released from Tehran's Evin prison, made their way to Cairo's Al Rifa'i Mosque to pay respects at the tomb of the last Shah. It is an event on July 27 that commemorates the loss of the imperial order and this year represented the 45th anniversary of the death of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. It came just weeks after the Shah's former patron, the US, bombed the regime that ousted the monarchy in what US President Donald Trump has called the 12-day war. Author Scott Anderson has written a definitive account of the last days of the monarchy in King of Kings (Shahanshah) with the subtitle Unmaking of the Modern Middle East. The current predicament of the religious leaders who preside over the new Iranian system could hardly be more present. His continuing conversations with Iranian contacts both within the country and in the diaspora mean that Anderson sees sentiment as having shifted to a more nationalistic plane, something that bolsters the Islamic Republic regime. 'I feel that the events of the last month have just set any [opposition] movement way back by years,' he tells The National from his west coast of the US home. 'Now the regime can paint anybody who is in opposition as 'lackeys of the Americans who just bombed our country and killed several hundred of our innocent civilians'.' There is a contrast with the beleaguered Shah in 1979 who saw the US as his last resort when one of the periodic outbursts of unrest turned into people power-style demonstrations that eventually overwhelmed his security forces. When it came to it, the book painfully illustrates how no help was there. Look west The Shah had gone to great lengths to woo America, something the book demonstrates very well. 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As Gary Sick, a White House adviser at the time, observed, if Iranians saw a sparrow fall from the tree, it was the CIA that killed it. So too the live images of the Washington clashes sparked revolt in Iran. Self-regard What ultimately paved Khomeini's way to power lay in the Shah himself. Anderson says Reza Shah believed his own Shahanshah propaganda on the country's modernisation but failed to see how that created dangers. 'Obviously the Shah was extending prosperity,' he said. 'There was a huge number of scholarships. There was a certain lifestyle available in Tehran. The economic factor however isn't strong enough to save him. You had the streets flooded with young men, overwhelming men, coming from the countryside and from villages that really hadn't changed much of 300 years. Suddenly they are being exposed to this very westernised culture in the major Iranian cities. It would just cause a massive disjunction.' It was no coincidence that the Shah lost his vizier Asadollah Alam, who died in April 1978. During one of Alam's stints as prime minister, the state mobilised to crush massive demonstrations in 1963. It was also under Alam's firm hand that the Shah staged his grandiose and grating Persepolis celebrations of 2,500 years of the Persian empire, described as the most expensive party ever staged. 'Alam was his alter-ego for 20-odd years, and actually he was the one who crushed things in 1963 as the prime minister at the time,' said Anderson. 'He crushed the clerical revolts and oversaw Khomeini getting sent into exile. Ironically, the Americans saw that as the Shah's response. It wasn't the Shah's response, but the Shah took credit for it. The Americans finally saw the Shah as a strongman, and so that was kind of a secret that he always had with us.' Ailing monarch The Shah himself was ill with the cancer that killed Alam, during the 1978 events. 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Khaleej Times
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