Tomislav salvopek being held hostage |
Egyptian
security forces have killed the Islamic State (Isis) commander allegedly
involved in kidnapping Croatian surveyor Tomislav Salopek, who was subsequently
beheaded. Authorities said in a statement IS militant Ashraf Ali Hasanain
al-Gharabli had been killed in Cairo.
In a
statement on Facebook, the Egyptian Ministry of Information sad that
Al-Gharabli, who was wanted in connection with attacks near the border with
Libya and the kidnapping of Salopek, was killed in a gun battle in the Egyptian
capital's el-Marg area
Micheal
Horowitz, a senior analyst at the Levatine Group Middle East Consultancy
said that the killing marked a victory for Egyptian government forces in
their battle to halt the spread of Isis, which is suspected of involvement in
downing a Russian airliner, killing 224 people on board.
"The ISIS
branch in Egypt is formally limited to Sinai where a "Wilaya
[province]" was created, yet it has been seeking to expand to
mainland Egypt for several months now," said Horowitz. "Under
"Isis Misr [Egypt]" Isis has claimed several attacks in Cairo
including the bombing of the Italian embassy in July, or the car bomb attack
against the Shubra al-Kheimah security directorate in September amongst others.
"Egypt
has been able to kill or detain some members of the ISIS cell in Cairo, but
despite these efforts ISIS attacks have continued. ISIS and the Egyptian
military are in a race against the clock. The killing of Ashraf Ali Hasanain
al-Gharabli is in that sense a significant victory as it will likely disrupt
ISIS's expansion plans," said Horowitz.
He said that
not much was known of al-Gharabli, other than he had been on Egypt's most wanted
terrorists list since 2014, and was close to Hisham Ashmawy, a former army
officer who quit as a commander of jihadist group Ansar Bayt al-Maqdis when it
pledged allegiance to Isis, becoming Wilayat Sinai. "In light of his
experience and Ashmawy's departure, al-Gharabli was probably deeply involved in
ISIS's plan to expand to mainland Egypt," said Horowitz.
Oil and gas
surveyor Salopek was kidnapped in Cairo in July, and beheaded in a
video released by Wilayat Sinai in August. International flights from several
countries to the resort of Sharm el-Sheikh were suspended last week after officials
said it was likely a terrorist bomb had brought down a Russian airliner that
crashed in Sinai.
Isis claimed
responsibility for downing the airliner in a statement released after it
crashed on October 31.
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