http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2009/960/eg3.htm

 13 - 19 August 2009
Issue No. 960
Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875

Terror cells foiled
Security forces say they have prevented Al-Qae'da from gaining a foothold in 
Egypt, reports Jailan Halawi 

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The cease-fire initiative declared by Al-Gama'a Al-Islamiya and Jihad, the 
militant groups behind the wave of attacks that plagued Egypt in the 1990s, did 
not mark the end of the terrorist threat facing Egypt. Between 2004 and 2007 
the Sinai peninsula witnessed a number of bombings, and there were also 
incidents in Cairo. Yet recent attacks pale in comparison compared to the 
bloody days of the 1990s. Political analysts discount any possibility of a 
come-back by Al-Gama'a Al-Islamiya and/or Jihad and have tended to write off 
incidents as the work of "amateur" groups, though the security apparatus, on 
the whole, has preferred to remain silent. 

The customary "no comment" from security forces was abandoned in February, 
following the explosion of a bomb in Khan Al-Khalili that left a French 
schoolgirl dead and injured 24 others. Suddenly the press was rife with leaks, 
attributed to unnamed security sources, all hinting that a major breakthrough 
was in store. 

In May 2008, when a Christian jeweller was killed along with four of his 
workers, reporting of the incident was muted. A year later security forces 
began releasing reports that they had foiled an attempt by Al-Qaeda to 
establish a foothold in Egypt through an affiliate group, a cell of the Gaza 
based Palestinian Islamic Army, which was planning to carry out attacks in 
Egypt and France and is believed to have been behind the Khan attack. Twenty 
three members of the group were arrested, including Egyptian, Palestinian, 
Belgian, British and French nationals. 

This week security sources have confirmed that the group was, indeed, behind 
the Khan Al-Khalili bombing, and that it was planning a series of further 
attacks on historic mosques and churches as well as tourist sites. 

The leader of the cell has been identified as Khaled Ahmed Mustafa, aka Abu 
Mohamed El-Ansary. It is alleged that he was instructed by Al-Qaeda to join the 
Palestinian Islamic Army in Gaza where he met Egyptian national Ahmed Mohamed 
Seddik, aka Abu Mos'ab El-Masry, and the Palestinian Momtaz Mazloum. They 
received paramilitary training, including instruction in bomb making and urban 
warfare. 

Security sources say the group intended to recruit new members who would then 
cross the border to Gaza to receive training before returning to Egypt to 
launch attacks. Undercover investigators managed to infiltrate the cell, 
monitoring its sources of finance, training bases and communication networks. 

A second group, the Zeitoun cell, also thought to have links with Al-Qae'da, 
has been blamed for the robbery of the jewellery shop. The cell's alleged 
leader, Ahmed El-Shaarawi, was arrested when he returned from Saudi Arabia in 
June 2008. Two of his associates, Mohamed Khamis Ibrahim and Mohamed Fahim 
Hussein, were subsequently detained and are reported to have made full 
confessions. 

The group had attempted to set up a cell-based organisation, the Egyptian 
Mujahideen Army, that would dispatch members to fight in Iraq, Afghanistan and 
Palestine. Founded in 2007, the group based its ideology on Al-Da'wa 
Lilmoqawama Al-Islamiya (An invitation to Islamic Resistance), written by 
Sheikh Omar Abdel Hakam, aka Sheikh Abu Mos'ab El-Soury, a leading Al-Qae'da 
figure currently in prison in the US. The book outlines the ideology, strategy 
and techniques of resistance needed to establish an Islamic Caliphate. The 
group had planned a series of armed robberies to finance their activities, 
beginning with the Christian owned jewellery shop. 

While most detainees have confessed they did so, says their lawyer Montasser 
El-Zayyat, under duress. El-Zayyat complains that he has been denied one-on-one 
access with his clients. 

State Security Prosecutor Hisham Badawi has referred all the suspects to 
medical examiners to ascertain whether or not they have been mistreated. 

Meanwhile, the trial of 22 suspected members of a third cell, linked to 
Hizbollah, isvexpected to begin on 23 August.


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