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News / Nation & World

Bomb kills Egypt’s top prosecutor as he drives to work

The Columbian
Published: June 29, 2015, 12:00am
2 Photos
An Egyptian policeman stands guard at the site of a bombing that killed Egypt's top prosecutor, Hisham Barakat, on Monday in Cairo.
An Egyptian policeman stands guard at the site of a bombing that killed Egypt's top prosecutor, Hisham Barakat, on Monday in Cairo. Photo Gallery

CAIRO — A car bomb killed Egypt’s chief prosecutor Monday in the country’s first assassination of a senior official in 25 years, marking what could be an escalation in a campaign by Islamic militants toward targeting leaders of a crackdown on the Muslim Brotherhood.

Hisham Barakat led the prosecution of members of the Brotherhood and other Islamists, including former President Mohammed Morsi, who was overthrown by the military in July 2013. The courts have been handing out mass death sentences against them in trials harshly criticized as lacking due process.

Monday’s assassination of the 65-year-old Barakat came on the eve of the second anniversary of the mass demonstrations against Morsi that led to his ouster.

A car laden with explosives was detonated by remote control around 10 a.m. as Barakat’s motorcade left his home in the eastern district of Heliopolis, police said. He suffered multiple shrapnel wounds and was pronounced dead at 12:30 p.m. following surgery, medical officials said. Five guards, two drivers and one civilian also were injured in the blast.

An Egyptian militant group calling itself “Popular Resistance in Giza” claimed responsibility for the attack in an online statement, with photographs from the site of the bombing. The claim could not be independently verified. In a statement, the Muslim Brotherhood denied responsibility, but blamed authorities for the violence.

Authorities and pro-government TV networks blamed the Brotherhood, which they consider a terrorist group, broadly accusing it of orchestrating violence.

A senior security official said an initial investigation showed that Islamic militants along with the Brotherhood were responsible, while the State Information Service said the killing “clearly shows the terrorist group’s violent discourse” and underscores its “rejection of the state of law.” It equated the Brotherhood with extremist groups fighting in Iraq and Syria or killing tourists in Tunisia.

The Brotherhood has maintained that peaceful means are the only way to resist what it called a coup against Morsi, but recent shifts within the group’s youth cadres have signaled frustration with that approach and new support for using force.

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