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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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January 10, 2019
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Muslim
Brotherhood Affiliate Suspected in Tourist Bus Bombing
by Hany Ghoraba
Special to IPT News
January 10, 2019
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Egyptian officials suspect a violent branch of the Muslim Brotherhood,
called the Hasm Movement, is responsible for a Dec. 28 terrorist attack that killed three Vietnamese tourists and an
Egyptian tour guide.
Authorities believe that the attack on a tourist bus near the Giza
pyramids was in retaliation for a preemptive strike Egyptian security forces carried out
eight days earlier that killed eight Hasm militants and saw four others
arrested.
The raid on the Hasm hideouts aimed to thwart planned
Christmas and New Year's attacks. Officials found stashed assault weapons,
remote-controlled planes, a drone chassis and materials used to make
improvised explosive devices (IEDs) that have been used in attacks similar
to the tourist bus bombing.
"There were two cars belonging to Hasm seized with similar
explosives used in the operation," Egyptian High Council for
Counter-terrorism and Extremism General Khaled Okasha told UAE's Al-Ghad television. "There were alerts
that these Hasm cells desire to exploit this time of the year to conduct
operations."
The U.S. State Department designated
Hasm (Arms of Egypt Movement) and its sister group Liwa Al Thawara as
terrorist organizations a year ago. Both groups are associated with the Muslim Brotherhood. Hasm issued an emotional obituary
when former Brotherhood Supreme Guide Mehdi Akef died in 2017, describing
him as "the champion mujahid who fought the British Occupation, the
tyrants Nasser, Sadat and Mubarak and the fascist military regime that
didn't care for his age and sickness."
In a televised confession after last month's raids, detained
Hasm member Amr Ayman Alyeddin admitted being an active member of the
Muslim Brotherhood. He said that he joined the Brotherhood's military cells
through a recruiter named Yasser Al Zeiny, who is in Egyptian police custody.
Alyeddin says Al Zeiny connected him to a trainer who took him to terrorist camp
outside Cairo. Alyeddin was taught how to use weapons and given religious
law training.
Another cell member, Saladin Hamed, said he was
told that the Brotherhood leadership abroad has reformed the cells into
military units with codenames. The cells operate independently.
Egyptian police raided two terrorist hideouts in Giza in response to the bus attack, reportedly killing 40
terrorists.
Hasm is the Muslim Brotherhood's most effective militant wing, Okasha said, as Liwa Al Thawra
has been weakened by the government. Hasm was formed in 2014, while Liwa Al Thawra
emerged in 2016 as a splinter group from Hasm created by Brotherhood leader
Mohamed Kamal. Kamal was killed
in October 2016 in an exchange of gunfire with security officers.
Meanwhile, authorities also are investigating why the tour bus carrying
the Vietnamese tourists strayed
from a heavily patrolled route.
While the attack on the Vietnamese tourist bus created fears that Egypt's recovering tourism industry would
suffer, there are not yet any indications of any declines in visitors.
Egyptian officials point to a sharp drop in terrorist attacks in the
country. A new
report says there were just eight terrorist attacks last year, down
from 222 in 2014.
Aside from the threats posed by ISIS-affiliated groups in North Sinai,
Hasm remains a challenge for Egyptian security forces as it plots to
disrupt the improved security that the country is seeing. Other Hasm
operations in the past few years include failed assassination attempts on former Grand Mufti Ali Gomaa, Deputy Attorney General Zakaria Abdulaziz and Judge Ahmed Abou El Fotouh – who presided over the
prosecution of ousted Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi of the Muslim
Brotherhood.
Hasm also claimed responsibility for attacks on police, including
the 2017 assassination of national security officer Ibrahim El Azazi.
Its attacks are not limited to Egyptian targets. Hasm claimed responsibility for a small explosion outside
the Myanmar Embassy in Cairo in October 2017 to avenge Rohingya Muslims.
"This bombing serves as a warning to the embassy of murderers, killers
of women and children in the Muslim Rakhine State, and in solidarity with
the sons of this weakened Muslim population," a Hasm statement said.
Hasm protested after the United States' terrorist designation was
issued. After the U.S. Embassy in Cairo issued a travel warning last May
advising of a possible Hasm attack, the group played innocent. "We are
the #Resistance and we are not terrorist," a Hasm statement said. "There is no need to worry. We are
#Muslims, not killers."
The IED attack on the Vietnamese tourist bus indicates there is plenty
of reason to worry.
Hany
Ghoraba is an Egyptian writer, political and counter-terrorism
analyst at Al Ahram Weekly, author of Egypt's
Arab Spring: The Long and Winding Road to Democracy and a
regular contributor to the BBC.
Related Topics: Hany
Ghoraba, Muslim
Brotherhood, Hasm
Movement, IED
attacks, Khaled
Okasha, Liwa
Al Thawara, Mehdi
Akef, Amr
Ayman Alyeddin, Yasser
Al Zeiny, Mohamed
Kamal, Ibrahim
El Azazi
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