A bomb blast killed two Egyptian policemen and two civilians near the foreign ministry in central Cairo on Sunday
A bomb blast killed two Egyptian policemen and two civilians near the foreign ministry in central Cairo on Sunday, a security official said.
State television reported that a police officer and a conscript were killed in the blast in the heavily crowded area on the Nile River which houses the foreign ministry and state television headquarters.
The blast came one day after Egypt’s President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi told The Associated Press he is prepared to give whatever support is needed in the fight against the so-called Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant terrorist group but called for a "comprehensive strategy" to tackle the roots of ‘extremism’ across the region.
In his first interview with a foreign media outlet since taking office in June, el-Sissi sought to present himself and Egypt as being at the vanguard of confronting militancy, citing it as the reason for his ouster of Egypt’s first freely elected president more than a year ago.
He told AP that Egyptians had realized the danger of "political Islam" and that if he had not acted, the Arab world’s most populous nation would have faced "civil war" and bloodshed now seen in Iraq and Syria.
"I warned about the great danger a year ago," he said. "But it was not clear (to others) until the events in Iraq and the Islamic State’s sweep" over much of that country.