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On 24 and 25 January 2014 a series of bombs exploded in Greater Cairo. The first four explosions occurred on the day before the anniversary of the Egyptian Revolution of 2011,[3] with the fifth coming on the anniversary itself.
January 2014 Cairo bombings | |
---|---|
Part of Post-coup unrest in Egypt | |
Location | Cairo, Egypt |
Date | 24 and 25 January 2014 First and largest explosion at 06:30 local time |
Attack type | Bombings |
Weapons | Bomb, truck bomb, firearms |
Deaths | 7 (4 at police headquarters; 2 at Metro (Dokki);[1] 1 at cinema (Giza))[2] |
Injured | 100+[3] |
The first was at the police headquarters in Cairo, Egypt, which were attacked with a large truck bomb just after 06:30 local time.[3][4] CCTV caught a white truck stop at 06:29 outside the building, with the driver jumping into another car.[5] The blast could be heard across the city, and gunfire was heard after the explosion.[3] At least five people were killed and 75 injured.[3] The front of the multi-storey building was badly damaged, as were the National Archives building and the Museum of Islamic Art, whose collection was severely damaged.[3][5] Irina Bokova, Unesco's director-general, said: "This raises the danger of irreversible damage to the history and identity of the Egyptian people."[5] After the explosion a large crowd gathered, some of whom sang chants against the Muslim Brotherhood, including ""The people demand the execution of the Brotherhood."[4]
Three more bombs exploded in western Cairo: the first was near the Behoos Metro Station in the Dokki district (two people killed),[1][3][5] the second was at a police station near the Giza pyramids (no casualties),[3] and the third at the Radobis cinema in Giza (one person killed).[3]
On 25 January another bomb exploded at 07:00 local time in the Ein Shams district of eastern Cairo but there were no casualties.[6]
Ansar Bait al-Maqdis, a group affiliated to Al-Qaeda, claimed responsibility for all the bombings, saying in a statement, "We tell our dear nation that these attacks were only the first drops of rain, so wait for what is coming up."[3][6] A group called Soldiers of Egypt took responsibility for the blast near the metro station.[7]
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