Ayman Nofal,a top Hamas commander
Ayman Nofal,a top Hamas commanderAFP file

An Egyptian intelligence officer on Wednesday denied media reports that a top Hamas military commander was wanted by Cairo in connection with the killing in August of 16 border guards.

The Egyptian presidency, meanwhile, said authorities were still investigating the attack.

The government owned Al-Ahram Al-Arabi magazine last month reported that Ayman Nofal, a top commander in Hamas military wing the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, was allegedly wanted in Egypt in connection with last year's attack.

But an intelligence official dismissed the report as "completely false."

"We categorically deny this," the official said.

The presidency said investigations into the attack "have not yet finished," state television reported.

Hamas spokesman Taher al-Nunu told AFP that Al-Qassam Brigades was not involved in the August 5 Sinai attack, in which Islamist terrorists staged a bloody ambush on an Egyptian security post, killing 16 border police before crashing an armored vehicle and a truck through the border fence with Israel.

The accusations against Hamas come amid increased tensions between the Islamists after Egypt began destroying smuggling tunnels to Gaza.

A Hamas official told AFP his group was concerned it had become a "pawn" in a political battle between Islamist President Mohamed Morsi and his liberal-leaning opposition.

Hamas's deputy chief, Mussa Abu Marzuq, has been based in Cairo since the terrorist group's political leadership left Damascus in 2012.

He has met Egyptian opposition figures "to remove Hamas from the Egyptian domestic equation," the Hamas official told AFP.