Bombing at Egyptian police station follows a day of violent clashes

A bomb killed one person and wounded 17 others at a police station north of Cairo early Wednesday morning, say officials. About 100 people have died in violence since the army deposed Mohammed Morsi.

Supporters of ousted Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi walk near the mock grave of a protester who was killed during clashes in Giza on July 23. Six people were killed in Cairo on Tuesday in violence between supporters and opponents of Morsi, say state-run media.

Amr Abdallah Dalsh/Reuters

July 23, 2013

A bomb exploded at a police station in a province north of Cairo early on Wednesday, killing one person and wounding 17 others, Health Ministry and security sources told Reuters.

Unknown assailants threw the bomb from a passing car in Mansoura, the capital of Dakhalia province, two security sources said. A Health Ministry statement, issued shortly after the explosion, said 12 people were injured.

The bombing occurred after a day of clashes between opponents and Islamist supporters of Egypt's deposed president, Mohamed Morsi, killed nine people in Cairo.

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The Muslim Brotherhood, which propelled Morsi to power in the country's first democratic elections in 2012, accuses the army of orchestrating a coup that has exposed deep political divisions in the Arab world's most populous nation.

Supporters of Morsi, who has been held in an unknown location since the army deposed him on July 3 following mass protests calling for his removal from power, have vowed to stay in the streets until he is reinstated.

About 100 people have died in violence since the army deposed Morsi and replaced him with an interim administration led by Adli Mansour, the head of the constitutional court. New elections are expected to be held in about six months.

In the latest bout of violence in the capital, two protesters were killed at a pro-Morsi march early on Wednesday after clashes in Cairo, a security source and the Muslim Brotherhood said in a statement on their website.

(Editing by Doina Chiacu and Stacey Joyce)