Egyptian police said on Monday they killed a top Islamic State group
operative in the capital implicated in a string of attacks including the
murders of a Croat and an American.
An interior ministry
statement said Ashraf Ali Ali Hassanein al-Gharabli was shot dead in an
exchange of fire after police tried to arrest him.
Hassanein was
one of the most sought after militants in the country,
and had featured
in a wanted notice by police as early as January 2014, months into a
militant insurgency centred in the Sinai Peninsula.
He was also implicated in the bombing of the Italian consulate in Cairo last July.
A
police official told AFP he had been the right-hand man of Hisham
al-Eshmawi, a feared former commando who is believed to have spearheaded
a string of bombings and assassinations in the capital for the militant
Ansar Beit al-Maqdis group.
In November 2014, the group pledged
allegiance to ISIS, prompting Eshmawi to abandon it, and leaving
Hassanein as one the group's top operatives west of Sinai.
The
interior ministry statement said police had managed to track down
Hassanein in the capital, but when they tried to arrest him as he drove a
car in a north Cairo suburb he opened fire.
"He sensed them and
shot at them, in an attempt to flee, requiring the police forces to
exchange fire with him leading to his death," the ministry statement
said.
Monday, November 09, 2015
Egypt police kill leading ISIS militant in Cairo
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