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			 They said the suicide bomber struck when the two buses traveled on 
			the road between the border town of Rafah and the coastal city of 
			el-Arish. The explosion damaged both buses, the officials said. The 
			10 victims were the bus's driver, three members of a security detail 
			and six of the off-duty soldiers, according to a statement by Col. 
			Mohammed Ahmed Ali, a military spokesman. 
 			"The precious blood of our sons strengthens our resolve to cleanse 
			Egypt and shield its sons from violence and treacherous terrorism," 
			Ali wrote on his Facebook page. The wounded were being treated in 
			military hospitals, he said.
 			The soldiers belong to the 2nd Field Army, which is doing most of 
			the fighting against Islamic militant waging an insurgency against 
			security forces in Sinai. The buses were on their way to Cairo, the 
			officials said. 			
			
			 
 			The officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they weren't 
			authorized to release the information.
 			The northern Sinai region, which borders Gaza and Israel, has been 
			restless for years, but attacks have grown more frequent and 
			deadlier since the July ouster of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi.
 			There was no immediate claim of responsibility for Wednesday's 
			attack, but suicide car bombings are a signature method by militant 
			groups linked to or inspired by al-Qaida. It was the latest in a 
			series of similar attacks targeting army and police facilities and 
			checkpoints. In August, gunmen pulled 25 police conscripts off 
			minibuses in the Sinai and shot them dead on the side of the main 
			road linking Rafah to el-Arish.
 			Northern Sinai's violence occasionally has spilled over into cities 
			in the southern part of the peninsula as well as mainland Egypt, 
			targeting policemen, soldiers and politicians.
 			In September, the Interior Minister, who is in charge of the police, 
			survived an assassination attempt by a suicide car bomb. Earlier 
			this week, a senior security officer who monitors Islamist groups, 
			including Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood, was shot dead as he drove in 
			Cairo's eastern Nasr City district.
 			
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			Nasr City is a Brotherhood stronghold and home to several military 
			barracks.
 			Meanwhile, clashes late Tuesday between revolutionary youths 
			opposed to military rule and police killed a teenager and wounded 
			41, said Ahmed el-Ansari, head of Egypt's emergency services. He 
			said the teenager suffered a head wound from a birdshot pellet and 
			died while being taken to hospital.
 			The violence in Cairo's famed Tahrir Square followed daylong 
			protests marking the second anniversary of clashes between 
			protesters and police on an adjacent street. A joint police and army 
			contingent cleared the square of protesters late Tuesday.
 			On Wednesday at dawn, assailants threw a grenade at a police 
			checkpoint in a northern Cairo suburb, injuring four policemen, 
			security officials said. The assailants fled the scene, the 
			officials said.
 			Authorities have since Morsi's ouster waged a major crackdown 
			against the Brotherhood, arresting some 2,000 top and middle-level 
			members and several thousand followers. Hundreds were killed when 
			security forces cleared two protest camps of Morsi supporters in 
			August.
 			Morsi, along with the group's top leaders, are in detention and 
			face trials on charges that vary from murder and inciting murder to 
			conspiring with foreign powers and corruption. 			
			
			 
 			Supporters of the former president have staged near-daily protests 
			against the July 3 coup, mostly in universities. The number of 
			protesters, however, has been dwindling, although they occasionally 
			mass several thousand. [Associated 
					Press; HAMZA HENDAWI] Copyright 2013 The Associated 
			Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |