The Jerusalem Post

Terrorists kill 7 Christians outside Egypt monastery

Buses ambushed near site of 2017 massacre • 6 of dead from same family returning from baptism

- • By NADINE AWADALLA

CAIRO (Reuters) – Gunmen killed at least seven Christians who were returning from baptizing a child at a Coptic monastery in Egypt on Friday, officials said – the most serious attack on the minority in more than a year.

Six of the dead were from the same family, and another 18 people, including children, were wounded, the Coptic Church’s spokesman said.

Islamic State claimed responsibi­lity for the ambush in Minya province in central Egypt, the terrorist group’s Amaq News Agency said, without providing evidence of its involvemen­t.

“The jihadists targeted them with light weapons and killed 13 people and injured 18,” the group said in a statement released much later in the evening. “This operation comes as revenge for our chaste sisters that were arrested by the apostate Egyptian regime, and we promise more attacks to all who aid it.”

Egyptian security forces on Wednesday night detained six women, including the daughter of former presidenti­al candidate and senior Muslim Brotherhoo­d leader Khairat al-Shater.

The Muslim Brotherhoo­d has denied any links to Islamic State.

The attackers opened fire mid-afternoon on two buses near the Monastery of St. Samuel the Confessor in Minya, 260 kilometers up the River Nile from Cairo, the church spokesman said.

Footage posted on social media showed bodies inside a bus with apparent gunshot wounds. Reuters was not able to verify the authentici­ty of the pictures.

The attackers then fled, a witness at the monastery said.

Local resident Hilal told Reuters he rushed to the scene after hearing about the attack and saw the terrorists on the road.

“Some of us came to try and block the road. There were three four-wheel drive vehicles and the terrorists opened fire... The terrorists wore white thobes and checkered head-dresses,” he told Reuters.

Islamic State and affiliated groups have claimed responsibi­lity for a series of attacks on Christians, including one that killed 28 people in almost the same spot in May 2017. Egypt’s army and police launched a crackdown on the terrorist groups in February, targeting the Sinai Peninsula as well as southern areas and the border with Libya.

President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi said he mourned the victims as martyrs and vowed to push ahead with the campaign.

“I assert our determinat­ion to fight dark terrorism and to pursue the perpetrato­rs,” he said on Twitter.

Saudi Arabia, Iran, the United Arab Emirates, Jordan and Kuwait all condemned the attack.

The European Union said it was a “stark reminder of the security challenges that Egypt is facing.”

Egypt says fighting Islamist terrorists is a priority to restore stability after the years of turmoil that followed the “Arab Spring” protests in 2011.

The public prosecutor said a team of investigat­ors has been dispatched to the scene of the attack.

 ?? (Mohamed Abd El Ghany/Reuters) ?? MOURNERS GATHER for the funeral in Minya, Egypt, of Coptic Christians killed in an attack on Friday.
(Mohamed Abd El Ghany/Reuters) MOURNERS GATHER for the funeral in Minya, Egypt, of Coptic Christians killed in an attack on Friday.

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