A bomb exploded near a top court building in central Cairo yesterday, wounding nine people, the Interior Ministry said, extending a series of such attacks in the Egyptian capital.

The repeated security incidents in Cairo have raised concern over the effectiveness of security forces who have pledged to end Islamist militant violence bedevilling government efforts to revive investment and foreign tourism crucial to the economy and stability of the Arab world’s most populous country.

An Interior Ministry statement said the bomb exploded under a car near the courthouse, wounding five policemen and four civilians.

Security sources said the public prosecutor, whose office is in the building, was inside at the time of the blast. They said he had since left to inspect the scene of the attack.

Crowds gathered in front of the court, where police had blocked off nearby roads. There was some damage to two cars in the area and blood splattered on a nearby pavement.

Monday’s attack was the second in less than a week in Cairo. There were four bombings in the capital on Thursday. One person was killed and two were wounded in one of the attacks outside a restaurant in the residential Imbaba district of the capital, the Interior Ministry said.

While most of the worst attacks in Egypt have hit the Sinai Peninsula, a remote but strategic region bordering Gaza and Israel that is a hotbed of Islamist militants, smaller blasts have become increasingly common in Cairo and other cities.

Egypt has been grappling with rising Islamist militancy since then-army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi ousted freely elected Islamist President Mohamed Morsi in 2013 after mass protests against his year-old rule.

Sisi, now President, has cracked down hard on Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood, which the government has declared a terrorist group.

The Brotherhood renounced violence as a means of political change decades ago and denies any link with recent militant attacks.

Yesterday’s attack was not the first to target court buildings in Cairo. In October, a homemade bomb exploded near the same area, wounding 12 people.

Sisi signed off on an anti-terrorism law last week giving authorities sweeping powers to ban groups on charges ranging from harming national unity to disrupting public order.

Such an action has dimmed hopes for democratisation raised by the fall of veteran autocrat Hosni Mubarak to a popular uprising in 2011. Cairo is hoping security concerns will not detract from a high-profile investment conference it is hosting later this month in the Sinai Red Sea resort town of Sharm al-Sheikh.

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