A
powerful bomb ripped through the Italian consulate in Cairo Saturday,
killing one person, the first assault on a foreign mission in Egypt in a
two-year militant campaign against security forces.
The consulate in central Cairo was closed at the time of the
explosion around 6:30 am (0430 GMT), which brought down the facade of
the building and could be heard across the capital.
A health ministry spokesman said the blast killed one person and
wounded four. Medics had earlier said two policemen and three passers-by
had been wounded.
Italy swiftly condemned the attack, with its foreign minister Paolo Gentiloni saying "Italy will not let itself be intimidated."
He added on Twitter that there were no Italian casualties.
Militants have carried out scores of attacks since the army overthrew
Islamist president Mohamed Morsi in July 2013, killing hundreds of
policemen and soldiers mostly in the Sinai Peninsula.
Diplomats had told AFP they had been warned by police months ago that
embassies could be targeted, but it was not clear whether this was
based on specific intelligence.
At least one Western embassy had relocated over security concerns.
The Italian consul in Cairo arrived at the scene of the attack and
went inside the building to inspect it, refusing to speak to reporters.
The official MENA news agency reported that the blast was caused by car bomb.
It brought down part of the building, and the remains of at least one vehicle were strewn on the street.
A small wooden police kiosk outside the consulate was completely destroyed.
The attack came less than two weeks after suspected militants
assassinated the country s top prosecutor in a car bombing in the
capital.
In Sinai, militant loyal to the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria
launched a wave of attacks on July 1 that killed at least 21 soldiers.
The Islamic State group, which controls parts of Iraq and Syria, has
called on its affiliates elsewhere to attack Western targets.
Last week s attacks had prompted President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi to
pledge tougher laws with the cabinet set to approve a controversial
anti-terrorism law that sparked an uproar among journalists and rights
activists.
New anti-terror law
Sisi, the former army chief who led Morsi s ouster, won elections
last year, pledging to wipe out the militants and Morsi s blacklisted
Muslim Brotherhood movement.
Sisi had overseen a crackdown that killed at least 1,400 people,
mostly Islamist protesters during the dispersal of sometimes violent
protests.
Thousands have been jailed, including secular dissidents, and
hundreds sentenced to death in mass trials, although most have won
retrials.
The crackdown had initially brought international pressure,
especially from the European Union, on Sisi which has largely given way
to support as he positions himself as a front line opponent of regional
jihadists.
Sisi visited Italy among other European countries late last year, meeting his Italian counterpart Matteo Renzi.
The president is widely popular in Egypt, where many have demanded a
strong leader who can restore stability after more than four years of
turmoil following a 2011 uprising that overthrew veteran strongman Hosni
Mubarak.
But rights groups say freedoms have been trampled under Sisi s administration.
The draft anti-terrorism law would ban independent reporting of
militant attacks, stipulating a two-year prison sentence for journalists
who contradict death tolls in official statements.
The cabinet has said it would reconsider that provision following a media outcry.
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