An Egyptian police officer shot dead two Israeli tourists and their Egyptian guide on Sunday, as war raged for a second day between Israel and Palestinian militants.
Israel’s national security council later said its citizens should consider not travelling abroad particularly in the Middle East “on the backdrop of the attack in Egypt”. It said visitors already in Egypt should leave “as soon as possible”.
The police officer fired “at random” at an Israeli tour group visiting Alexandria using his personal weapon, the state-affiliated private television Extra News said, quoting a security source. A fourth person was wounded and the police officer was immediately arrested, it added.
The Israeli foreign ministry confirmed the deaths in a statement.
“This morning during a visit of Israeli tourists in Alexandria, Egypt, a local opened fire at them, murdering two Israeli citizens and their Egyptian guide,” it said. “In addition, there is a wounded Israeli in moderate condition.”
Israel’s national security council said “there is a fear of a rise in motivation of terror groups and lone assailants” who could carry out attacks on Israelis abroad.
Cairo had not immediately commented on the attack against the tourists.
The deaths came as fighting raged after Palestinian militants on Saturday launched a multi-pronged attack on Israel, which has declared war on the Hamas movement and launched airstrikes on Gaza.
Egypt was the first Arab country to forge a peace deal with Israel in 1979, and has long served as an intermediary between Israel and the Palestinians.
Israeli tourists regularly visit Egypt but, despite the diplomatic relations, Israel remains largely unpopular among Egyptians.
In June, three Israeli soldiers were killed in a firefight at the border with Egypt by a member of the Egyptian security forces who crossed the boundary “in pursuit of drug traffickers”, according to the Egyptian army.
On Saturday, Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi warned of a “vicious cycle of tensions threatening regional stability and security”.
…the police officer was immediately arrested
I’m American, can someone explain what these words mean in this particular order? I’m not familiar with the concept…
Its like giving an officer unpaid leave but with handcuffs?
Also American.
Unpaid leave, for a cop? Ha, ridiculous.
I’m with you, it sounds like some third party took over the situation and was able to make the shooting police officer go away or halt or something.
Idk it’s weird.
According to some local Egyptian news (Mada Masr).
It started as argument between the officer and Israeli tourists who were taking photos with Israel’s flag. After multiple requests (to not take photos with the flag), things evolved into argument and finally shooting at them.
Well if they were taking photos with a flag I guess the logical conclusion is to start shooting
It’s a different effect depending on the nationality. If you take a picture of the French flag they just sue you for copyright violation.
Or was an attempt of a discrete colonization by the Israel gov. If they didn’t do it so much on other places maybe the cop wouldn’t be so afraid they were doing it there XD
Shut up Russian bot
You shush to our humourless twat
sush to our humourless twat
Is “our humourless twat” Putin? Because nobody will “shush” to him except for the Russian people.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Israel’s national security council later said its citizens should consider not travelling abroad particularly in the Middle East “on the backdrop of the attack in Egypt”.
The police officer fired “at random” at an Israeli tour group visiting Alexandria using his personal weapon, the state-affiliated private television Extra News said, quoting a security source.
A fourth person was wounded and the police officer was immediately arrested, it added.
Israel’s national security council said “there is a fear of a rise in motivation of terror groups and lone assailants” who could carry out attacks on Israelis abroad.
Israeli tourists regularly visit Egypt but, despite the diplomatic relations, Israel remains largely unpopular among Egyptians.
On Saturday, Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi warned of a “vicious cycle of tensions threatening regional stability and security”.
The original article contains 322 words, the summary contains 131 words. Saved 59%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
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