Egyptian military helicopters on Friday carried out air strikes on Extremist militant positions in Sinai, two days after suicide bombers killed six soldiers in the restive peninsula, security sources said.
Egyptian military helicopters on Friday carried out air strikes on Extremist militant positions in Sinai, two days after suicide bombers killed six soldiers in the restive peninsula, security sources said.
Apache helicopters targeted hideouts and vehicles used by the militants near the town of Sheikh Zuwayid in northern Sinai, the sources said.
On Wednesday, two car bombs targeting the military intelligence headquarters in the town of Rafah and a nearby checkpoint killed six soldiers and the two militants who drove the vehicles.
A little known militant group in Sinai claimed responsibility for the attacks in the town bordering the Gaza Strip.
Jund al-Islam, or Islam's Soldiers in English, made the claim in a statement posted on militant forums.
The group accused the Egyptian military of targeting "unarmed Muslims" in its campaign to quell a militant insurgency in north Sinai.
The military has poured troops and armor into Sinai to crush the insurgency which surged after the army overthrew Egypt's president Mohammad Mursi on July 3.
A subsequent crackdown left hundreds killed and more than 2,000 arrested across the country.