Egyptian soldiers in streets of Sidi Gaber neighbourhood of Alexandria

Egyptian soldiers in streets of Sidi Gaber neighbourhood of Alexandria A bomb went off near a military intelligence building in northern Egypt on Sunday, wounding four soldiers, the army said. The explosion occurred in the Rashid province in the Nile Delta and destroyed the front compound wall of the building, the army said in a statement.
The blast comes after Egypt was hit by two attacks in less than a week. On Tuesday, a suicide car bomber killed 15 people at a police building in Mansoura, north of Cairo.
And on Thursday a bomb in Cairo wounded five people on a bus.
The army said Sunday's attack was a "continuation of cowardly terrorist acts".
The day after the Mansoura attack, which was claimed by al-Qaeda-inspired jihadists, Egypt's military-installed authorities accused the Muslim Brotherhood of ousted president Mohamed Morsi and listed it as a "terrorist organisation".
But the Brotherhood said in a statement that "it is innocent of any violent incident that has (been) or will be committed".
The designation means hundreds of thousands of members of the Islamist organisation now face prison sentences if they hold demonstrations or are found in possession of Brotherhood recordings or literature.
Since Morsi's ouster by the military on July 3, security forces have launched a crackdown on the group, that has seen more than 1,000 people killed and thousands of the toppled president's backers arrested.
Despite the repression, there have been several demonstrations across Egypt in the past three days and at least seven people have been killed in clashes between Morsi's supporters and opponents.
Source: AFP