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Egypt Extends Nationwide Emergency for Two Months

Egypt Extends Nationwide Emergency for Two Months
folder_openEgypt access_time11 years ago
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Egypt's interim president Thursday extended a nationwide state of emergency by two months, citing security conditions in the country, while state TV blamed Hamas for training Egyptian extremists.


Egypt Extends Nationwide Emergency for Two MonthsThe nearly month-old state of emergency, which gives security forces greater powers of arrest, had been due to expire within days. It was first declared in mid-August after authorities cleared two protest encampments held by supporters of ousted President Mohammad Mursi.

A nighttime curfew has also been in effect in much of the country since. The government will decide separately on whether to continue the curfew.

The extension had been widely expected, and the decree cited continued security concerns.
Scattered protests by Mursi supporters continue nearly daily, and the government says it faces an organized violent campaign to destabilize the country.
At the same time, extremist attacks on police stations, government offices and churches have grown more brazen in south Egypt, the restive Sinai and closer to the capital.

A day earlier, a pair of suicide bombers rammed an explosives-laden cars into military targets in the volatile Sinai Peninsula, killing nine soldiers.
Last week, a suicide car bombing in Cairo targeted the convoy of Interior Minister Mohammad Ibrahim, who is in charge of the police. He escaped unharmed but a civilian was killed in the first such political assassination attempt since Mursi's July 3 ouster.
In an interview with al-Masry al-Youm Wednesday, interim Prime Minister Hazem al-Beblawi said the government was recommending the state of emergency be extended for a month or two because of "an increasingly tense situation." He called it an "exceptional" measure that should be used minimally.

According to the interim constitution, the state of emergency can only be imposed for three months, then it must be put to a public referendum.
Meanwhile, Egyptian state television accused Palestinian Hamas militants of training Egyptian extremists in how to carry out bombings, piling yet more pressure on the Brotherhood, ally of Hamas.

In neighboring Gaza, the ruling Hamas strongly denied the allegations.
The allegations that Hamas has been training Egyptian militants could lead the military-backed authorities to escalate their crackdown on the Brotherhood.

"Security authorities have learned that the military wing of the Hamas movement trained several people to undertake car bombing operations and trained various others to make explosives," a presenter said on state television.
"The military wing of the Hamas movement provided various Salafi "jihadists" and also other religious currents with 400 land mines. The security apparatus documented this and they will be arrested."
Fawzi Barhoum, spokesman for Hamas, said of the report: "This is completely incorrect."

It was an "attempt to demonize Hamas," he added.

The army-backed government in Egypt has tightened control of crossings from the Sinai peninsula into Gaza, which Egypt ruled from 1948 to 1967, and continued assaults on militants in Sinai.
Two Egyptian army tanks crossed an initial border fence leading to Gaza for the first time Thursday, witnesses said, but did not enter the Palestinian territory itself.
Gaza's Hamas rulers neither confirmed nor denied the incursion, but said no Egyptian tanks had entered the besieged Strip.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team


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