Dayton Daily News

Egyptian knife attacker first sat, spoke with victims

2 German women killed at popular Red Sea resort.

- By Ahmed Hatem and Hamza Heendawi

The attack appeared to have been inspired by recent calls made by the local affiliate of the Islamic State for its followers to attack Egypt’s minority Christians and foreign tourists.

The HURGHADA, EGYPT — Egyptian university graduate who stabbed two German women to death at a popular Red Sea resort first sat and spoke to them in fluent German before producing a large kitchen knife and attacking them, security officials said Saturday.

Leaving them for dead, 29-year-old Abdel-Rahman Shaaban fled the scene, chased by hotel workers and security guards. He rushed into the hotel next door, where he attacked and wounded four female tourists who, according to local media reports, included two Armenians, one from Ukraine and another from the Czech Republic.

“Stay back, I am not after Egyptians,” Shaaban shouted in Arabic at his pursuers, according to the officials. They eventually caught up with him, disarmed him and handed him over to the police. Shaaban stabbed the women in the face, neck and feet, said the officials.

No group claimed responsibi­lity for the Friday attack, but it appeared to have been inspired by recent calls made by the local affiliate of the Islamic State for its followers to attack Egypt’s minority Christians and foreign tourists.

The officials said Abdel-Rahman hails from the Nile Delta province of Kafr el-Sheikh, where he attended the business school of the local branch of Al-Azhar University — the world’s foremost seat of learning for Sunni Islamics and the target of mounting criticism over its alleged radical teachings and doctrinal rigidity.

Investigat­ors were still trying to determine how Shaaban came to be in Hurghada, one of Egypt’s main Red Sea resorts, popular for its year-round sunny weather and diving.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

A statement Saturday by the national security prosecutor’s office, which was questionin­g Shaaban in Cairo, said his motives and ideologica­l conviction­s remained unclear.

Police meanwhile were interviewi­ng 15 hotel workers to piece together what happened.

Germany on Saturday gave the first official confirmati­on that the two tourists killed by Shaaban were German nationals, but gave no other informatio­n. Local German media reports, however, said the two had resided in Hurghada and were not tourists.

In a statement, the German Foreign Ministry said: “According to everything that we know, this act was aimed at foreign tourists — a particular­ly perfidious and criminal act that leaves us sad, dismayed and angry.”

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