Four killed in bomb blast near Egyptian pyramids

dpatop - 28 December 2018, Egypt, Giza: Security soldiers stand guard as a damaged tourist bus is being removed after it was struck by a roadside bomb near the Pyramids of Giza at the district of al-Maryutia. The Egyptian Interior Ministry said that two Vietnamese nationals were killed in the attack, while a total of 12 others, including 10 Vietnamese tourists, who were inside the bus, were injured in the blast. Photo: Ahmed Abdelfattah/dpa (Photo by Ahmed Abdelfattah/picture alliance via Getty Images)
Photo credit: Getty

Three Vietnamese tourists and an Egyptian guide have been killed and at least 10 others injured when a roadside bomb blast hit their tour bus less than 4 km from Egypt's world-famous Giza pyramids, authorities said.

The bombing is the first deadly attack against foreign tourists in Egypt for over a year and comes as the tourism sector, a vital source of foreign currency revenue, recovers from a sharp drop in visitor numbers since the country's 2011 uprising.

No immediate claim of responsibility was reported.

Islamist extremists, including militants linked to Islamic State, are active in Egypt and have targeted foreign visitors in the past.

At least nine Vietnamese tourists were injured, as well as the Egyptian driver, according to official statements.

The tourists were heading to a sound and light show at the pyramids, which they had visited earlier in the day, said Lan Le, 41, who was also aboard the bus but unhurt.

"We were going to the sound and light show and then suddenly we heard a bomb. It was terrible, people screaming," she told Reuters, speaking at Al Haram hospital, where the injured were taken. "I don't remember anything after."

Egypt's interior ministry said the bus was hit by an explosion from an improvised device hidden near a wall at around 6.15pm local time.

About two hours later the vehicle could be seen behind a police cordon with one of its sides badly damaged and the windows blown out, a Reuters reporter said.

Dozens of police, military and firefighters were at the site, on a narrow sidestreet close to the ring road, where traffic was moving normally.

Shortly afterward, workers brought a pick-up truck to tow the bus away.

An investigator at the scene said the device had likely been planted near the wall.

The interior ministry confirmed the death of two of the tourists, and the state prosecutor's office later said a third had died. In total, 14 Vietnamese tourists had been travelling on the bus, it said.

Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly told local TV from Al Haram hospital that the guide had died from his injuries.

"The bus deviated from the route secured by the security forces," Madbouly told Extra News channel, an assertion also made by the owner of the company that organised the bus tour.

"We have been in contact with the embassy of Vietnam to contain the impact of the incident, and what is important now is to take care of the injured," the prime minister said.

The bus driver later told local media he had not deviated from the route.

Reuters