Cairo: Egypt’s Interior Ministry said on Saturday police officers had shot dead 16 gunmen in two shootouts, adding that most of those killed were fugitive militants linked to recent attacks on security forces in Northern Sinai.
Egypt faces an extremist insurgency led by the IS group in the restive Sinai Peninsula, where hundreds of soldiers and police have been killed since 2013.
At least 23 soldiers were killed on Friday when suicide car bombs tore through two military checkpoints in the region in an attack claimed by IS.
It was one of the bloodiest assaults on security forces in years.
The Interior Ministry said in a statement that gunmen had opened fire on police as they approached a desert training camp for militants in Ismailia.
The officers returned fire, killing 14 militants, five of whom have been identified so far.
The camp was used to “subject (recruits) to military training programmes on the use of various types of firearms and manufacture explosive devices...,” the statement said. In a separate statement, the ministry said its forces killed two men described as fugitive terrorists in an exchange of gunfire in the
city of Giza.
The men, who were inside an apartment, opened fire on security forces as soon as the officers approached to arrest them, it said. The statement said the pair were members of a newly emerged militant group called Hasm, which claimed responsibility for the killing of a homeland security officer outside his home in Qalubiya, a province just north of Cairo, while on his way to prayers on Friday.
Hasm has claimed several attacks around Cairo targeting judges and policemen since
last year.
Other groups such as Hasm, which the government says are linked to the Muslim Brotherhood, are active in Cairo and other cities where they have targeted security forces, judges and pro-government figures. — Reuters