A little-known jihadist group, Ajnad Misr, has claimed responsibility for a string of bomb attacks targeting Egyptian security forces in Cairo, including one that killed a police officer.
Militants have stepped up attacks on security forces since the army ousted president Mohamed Morsi in July, while the military-installed authorities have launched a deadly crackdown on his supporters.
Most attacks have been in the restive Sinai Peninsula, but in recent months they have also been launched farther afield in the Nile Delta and in the capital.
In a statement posted on Twitter and Facebook, Ajnad Misr claimed responsibility for a bomb blast that hit a traffic police kiosk on Friday evening.
One police officer was killed in the explosion, on a main square of the Egyptian capital, and a policeman and a civilian were wounded.
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Ajnad Misr also claimed it was behind a bomb blast on Tuesday that wounded two policemen and a civilian passer-by, and a third explosion on April 10 that wounded a policeman in a Cairo suburb.
On Thursday, the group said it had carried out eight attacks in Cairo since November 20.
It also vowed new attacks against security forces in retaliation for their crackdown on Morsi supporters that, according to Amnesty International, has claimed 1400 lives.
The deadliest attacks have been claimed by jihadist Sinai-based group Ansar Beit al-Maqdis.
Official figures show that about 500 people - mostly policemen and soldiers - have been killed in bombing and shooting assaults by militants in Egypt since July.
