CAIRO: A leading international rights group warned on Monday of a humanitarian crisis in the northern part of Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula amid severe restrictions on the movement of people and goods there due to a massive security operation against Islamic militants.

The Egyptian military launched the operation in early February in the restive northern Sinai, the epicentre of an Islamic insurgency spearheaded by the local affiliate of the so-called Islamic State group. The campaign also included parts of the Nile Delta region and the Western Desert, along the porous border with Libya.

The campaign has left up to 420,000 residents in northern Sinai in urgent need of humanitarian aid since the operation started, Human Rights Watch said.

The New York-based group also urged authorities to provide sufficient food and allow relief organisations such as the Egyptian Red Crescent to provide resources to address the local residents’ critical needs.

The military campaign against IS has included severe restrictions on the movement of people and goods in almost all of northern Sinai, HRW said.

“The Egyptian army’s actions ... reveal the gap between what President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi’s claims to be doing on behalf of the citizenry and the shameful reality,” said Sarah Leah Whitson of Human Rights Watch.

The military, however, has denied that there is a food crisis, saying it continues to provide food convoys and has opened several new facilities that are selling food and goods and other necessities at discounted prices to the local population.

Egyptian security forces have been battling Islamic militants in Sinai for years, but the violence spread and intensified in 2013 after the military overthrew President Mohammed Morsi, a freely elected Islamist whose one-year in office proved divisive.

Published in Dawn, April 24th, 2018

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