The Province

Cairo vows to avenge carnage

As Egypt grieves 305 victims of Sinai mosque attack, army ramps up strikes on militants

- Louisa Loveluck and Heba Farouk Mahfouz

CAIRO — Egypt’s security forces were on high alert Saturday after striking back at militants whose massacre of more than 300 people at a Sinai mosque raised fears of a new and bloodier phase in the country’s struggle against Islamist insurgents.

Egypt’s state-run Informatio­n Service tried to portray Friday’s carnage — at least 305 dead, or about quarter of the male population of the village of Rawda — as a sign of “weakness, despair and collapse” among militants opting for easy civilian targets rather than hitting heavily armed security forces as in the past.

But the level of coordinati­on and precision by the attackers gave no obvious suggestion­s of a struggling force in an area where ISIL-inspired groups have gained a key foothold.

The assault on a mosque — a rarity in Egypt — also raised concerns over increasing threats to the country’s minorities, including the Muslim Sufi community hit Friday.

Survivors and officials described five pickup trucks carrying up to 30 gunmen converging on the al-Rawda mosque as the imam began his sermon. Some worshipper­s died in a suicide blast; others were gunned down as they ran. The attackers would later walk among the fallen, 27 of them children, shooting those who appeared to be breathing.

Eyewitness­es said that some had carried a black flag that local residents recognized as belonging to State of Sinai, a local ISIL affiliate that has remained largely intact even as ISIL’s main bases in Iraq and Syria have crumbled.

By the time the attackers left, there were so many bodies on the ground that a fleet of ambulances couldn’t hold them, said a local resident, Muhamed Khalil, 25. Instead, the bodies were piled high on the back of pickup trucks and in the trunks of private cars.

Although no group has claimed responsibi­lity for the attack, suspicion immediatel­y fell on ISIL-linked militants who have duelled with the army across the desert region.

President Abdel Fatah al-Sissi vowed to avenge the bloodshed with “brute force” — pushed by widespread horror to act with even more resolve.

Egyptian security forces have been locked in battle with the country’s ISIL affiliate for several years. The insurgency has killed hundreds in the heavily patrolled Sinai and militants have struck further afield, including Christian Coptic churches in Cairo and Alexandria.

“The Egyptian government has been describing its reaction to every attack as a harsh response since the summer of 2013, if not before. So it’s difficult to assess what is meant by a promise to do more than that,” said Zack Gold, a non-resident fellow with the Atlantic Council’s Rafik Hariri Center for the Middle East.

Late Friday, the army said that it launched airstrikes on vehicles apparently used by the assailants, but it was unclear if any suspected militants were killed in the counteratt­ack.

In Rawda, a hamlet off the roadway cutting across northern Sinai, almost no one was left untouched by the violence.

According to Egypt’s 2011 census, Rawda was home to some 2,100 people. Assuming the population had stayed relatively constant, it appeared that Friday’s massacre would have killed around a quarter of the male population.

“We had to bury them in mass graves. In every hole, we would bury 40 or 50,” said the resident Khalil, who help lay entire families together. “People were silent, motionless, unable to grasp the reality of what had happened.”

The massacre also drew acts of kindness. Community members arrived at a hospital in droves to donate blood, first aid kits and all the painkiller­s they could afford.

Egyptian security forces have been locked in battle with the militants since 2011, when the group initially trained its firepower on Israel. But when the army overthrew Islamist President Mohammed Morsi in July 2013, the campaign instead set its sights on Egypt’s security forces.

Since the militants’ 2014 pledge of allegiance to ISIL, the government has worked to keep its war with extremists in the shadows. Journalist­s are banned from entering the area, amid frequent reports of militant atrocities and heavy-handed tactics by the army.

But local residents said an attack had been threatened for weeks.

“An (ISIL) member would stand at the entrance of the village, hand a piece of paper to a resident and ask him to deliver it to one of the Sufi scholars in the area,” said a local journalist, who asked that his name be withheld out of fears for his security.

“The attack was never a surprise to the community here. It is the savagery that was,” he said.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Discarded shoes of victims remain outside Al-Rawda Mosque in Bir al-Abd northern Sinai, Egypt on Saturday, a day after Islamist insurgents killed hundreds of worshipper­s.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Discarded shoes of victims remain outside Al-Rawda Mosque in Bir al-Abd northern Sinai, Egypt on Saturday, a day after Islamist insurgents killed hundreds of worshipper­s.

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