National Post (National Edition)

DOZENS KILLED IN CHURCH BOMBINGS

- HAMZA HENDAWI

TANTA, EGYPT • Bombs that exploded at two Coptic churches during Palm Sunday services killing 43 people may mark the beginning of a new campaign of violence against the ancient Christian community.

Bombers managed to evade security measures to launch their attacks at the start of Holy Week leading up to Easter.

In the first attack, a bomb went off inside St. George’s Church in the Nile Delta city of Tanta, killing at least 27 people and wounding 78, officials said.

Television footage from Tanta showed people singing hymns before the bomb went off, then the screen went black and screams and cries could be heard.

Priests and the church choir were among the casualties as the bomb went off near the altar.

“Everything is destroyed inside the church” and blood can be seen on marble pillars, Peter Kamel told CNN.

“I ran to the church to find my lifelong friend shattered to pieces by the bomb,” said Mona Faiez, 61, who lives near the church and came running after she heard the blast. Her friend, Soliman Shaker, was a church deacon.

“What kind of human could do this and why?”

“I was at the altar when I heard the explosion. I fell to the ground,” said church steward Victor Foad.

On gazing upon the aftermath, he said: “I kept looking at the human remains, but I didn’t recognize who was who because their faces were so damaged, even though I know them.”

The church entrance was equipped with a detector for explosives — leading many to wonder how the atrocity could have happened.

A few hours later, a suicide bomber rushed toward St. Mark’s Cathedral in the coastal city of Alexandria, the historic seat of Christendo­m in Egypt, killing at least 16 people and wounding 41, the Interior Ministry said.

Pope Tawadros II had held Palm Sunday services at the cathedral, but his aides said he had escaped unharmed. The timing of the attack raised the question of whether the bomber had sought to assassinat­e the pope, leader of one of the world’s oldest Christian communitie­s.

Fadi Sami, who had earlier been inside the cathedral, returned after the bombing.

“There were bodies and body parts everywhere, outside and inside the gate. I saw a man put together what was left of his son in a bag,” he told CNN.

Eyewitness­es said the Alexandria attack happened outside the main gate of the church compound, after the suicide bomber was blocked by police from entering. “When the police officer tried to stop him by force, he exploded the explosive belt, killing the police officer and himself,” said Kameel Sadiq Sawiras, secretary-general of the church council.

The atrocities are the latest assault on a religious minority increasing­ly targeted by Islamist terrorists, and a challenge to President al-Sisi, who has pledged to protect them in his campaign against extremism.

The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) claimed the attacks after having recently warned that it would step up violence against Egypt’s Christians. More recently, hundreds of Christians fled Egypt’s Sinai after militants aligned with ISIL killed several Christians, attacking in their homes or in drive-by shootings.

Pope Francis, marking Palm Sunday in St. Peter’s Square, decried the bombings, expressing “deep condolence­s to my brother, Pope Tawadros II, the Coptic church and all of the dear Egyptian nation.” He is due to visit Egypt April 28-29.

IF PEOPLE WHO ARE HERE SEEKING ASYLUM AND TREAT US LIKE THIS, IT IS NOT GOOD. SO NOW WE HAVE TO HAVE MORE SECURITY IN OUR SOCIETY, BUT STILL WE DON’T LIKE TO LIVE IN BUNKERS. — LARS HOLM, 73-YEAR-OLD STOCKHOLM RESIDENT

 ?? AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? An Egyptian uses his cellphone to take photos of the destructio­n, debris, and bloodstain­s on the walls and icon murals inside the Mar Girgis Coptic church in Tanta, 120 kilometres north of Cairo, at which a bomb blast Sunday struck worshipper­s...
AFP / GETTY IMAGES An Egyptian uses his cellphone to take photos of the destructio­n, debris, and bloodstain­s on the walls and icon murals inside the Mar Girgis Coptic church in Tanta, 120 kilometres north of Cairo, at which a bomb blast Sunday struck worshipper­s...

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