Three police officers were wounded on Monday when a bomb exploded under a
traffic sentry post near a Cairo court house, security sources said, in
the latest in a series of attacks to hit the Egyptian capital.The explosion occurred in the affluent north-eastern Heliopolis district, they said.
Egyptian
authorities have pledged to end a wave of Islamist militant violence
that has swept across the country, but sporadic attacks on high-profile
locations in the city and elsewhere have continued.
No one claimed
immediate responsibility for Monday's bomb, in which a health ministry
spokesman confirmed three people were wounded.
A
two-year-old insurgency centred on the Sinai Peninsula has killed
hundreds of soldiers and police since the army ousted president Mohammed
Morsi after mass protests against his rule in 2013.
Investment and foreign tourism
Sinai
Province, which has pledged allegiance to the militant Islamic State
movement that has taken over swathes of Iraq and Syria, is the most
active group.
The violence is undermining efforts by the Egyptian
government to revive investment and foreign tourism crucial to the
economy and stability of the Arab world's most populous country.
While
the insurgency is concentrated in the Peninsula, which lies between
Israel, Gaza and the Suez Canal, violence has also hit the capital.
Egypt's
top public prosecutor was killed by a car bomb attack on his convoy in
late June, the most senior state official to die at the hands of
militants in two years.
Attacks have also targeted some of Egypt's tourism sites, including the Karnak temple in Luxor.
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