Israel shuts border crossing with Egypt after terror attack warning

After dozens killed in twin bombings in Egypt, reports of an 'imminent' threat forces Israel to shut border with its Arab neighbour

A girl looks at damage inside the St. George Church after a suicide bombing, in the Nile Delta town of Tanta (AP Photo/Nariman El-Mofty)

Israel has closed its Taba border crossing to Egypt following a warning by its anti-terrorism office of an “imminent” terror attack there.

The closure comes hours before the start of the Passover holiday, when Sinai is a popular destination for many Israelis.

Soon after the announcement, sirens wailed in parts of southern Israel alerting residents to a rocket attack.

The military said a rocket fired from Sinai exploded in an open field, causing no injuries.

Intelligence Minister Yisrael Katz said in a statement there was intel regarding a potential “terror attack” against tourists in the Sinai peninsula.

The crossing remains open for those wanting to return from Egypt.

The entrance to the Israeli terminal of the Taba gate from Eilat.

The border closure comes a day after terrorists in Egypt bombed two churches, killing dozens of Christian worshippers during Palm Sunday ceremonies.

In the wake of those attacks, Israel’s anti-terrorism office called on all Israeli tourists in Sinai to return home immediately and asked Israelis planning trips to the Sinai to cancel.

The Israeli government statement says that intelligence information shows “increased activity by Islamic State militants” in Sinai.

It adds that with IS losing ground in Iraq and Syria, there is renewed “motivation to carry out terror attacks in different arenas at this time”.

People gather outside the St. George’s Church after a suicide bombing, in the Nile Delta town of Tanta, Egypt, Sunday, April 9, 2017.
(AP Photo/Nariman El-Mofty)

Southern Sinai, with its pristine beaches and Red Sea coral reefs, has traditionally been a popular Israeli tourist destination – especially for secular Israelis during the Passover holiday that starts on Monday evening.

But tourism there has declined since 2013, when the Egyptian military overthrew an elected Islamist president and an Islamic insurgency based in northern Sinai intensified.

Israel issues travel recommendations from time to time based on intelligence reports.

Monday’s travel warning was rare in its urgency.

Israel signed a peace treaty with neighbouring Egypt in 1979.

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