Houston Chronicle

Gunmen kill pilgrims in Egypt

Christians shot after refusal to say Islamic declaratio­n

- By Declan Walsh and Nour Youssef NEW YORK TIMES

CAIRO — Dressed in military fatigues, the gunmen waved down the bus filled with Christian pilgrims as it wended its way down a dusty side-road in the desert of western Egypt, headed toward a monastery.

Claiming to be security officers, the gunmen ordered the passengers to get out. They separated the men from the women and children and instructed them to surrender their mobile phones. They told the men to recite the shahada,

the Islamic declaratio­n of faith.

When the men refused, the gunmen opened fire.

At least 28 people were killed, several with a single shot to the head, according to Egyptian authoritie­s and relatives of the victims, several of whom were children. The attack Friday in Minya province, 120 miles south of Cairo, was a coldbloode­d escalation of sectarian violence targeting minority Christians that has left more than 100 people dead since December and shaken the country’s government.

There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity in the latest assault. Yet it bore the hallmarks of the Islamic State, which in the past six months has dispatched suicide bombers into crowded Sunday services and caused an entire community in northern Sinai to flee their homes in panic.

Airstrikes in Libya

The Egyptian response came hours later. As President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi delivered a speech from the presidenti­al palace warning that the attack on Christians “will not go unanswered,” the military announced that Egyptian fighter jets had carried out airstrikes on several militant camps inside Libya. In eastern Libya, a military force led by Gen. Khalifa Hifter, a close ally of Egypt, said it had taken part in the air raids, Reuters reported.

Some of the attacks hit the town of Derna, a base of several Islamist militias. It was not the first such reprisal. Egypt also hit targets in Libya in 2015 after militants beheaded 21 Coptic Christian migrants.

Still, the attacks on Libya hinted that the gunmen responsibl­e for the latest violence could have come through Egypt’s western desert — a potentiall­y new flank in a war that has until now centered on Sinai in the east of the country.

In staging the Minya attack, at least seven armed assailants, some masked, lay in wait for the victims on a sandy road leading from a busy highway to the Monastery of St. Samuel the Confessor, which is home to about 100 monks. They attacked three vehicles traveling in a convoy — two buses carrying worshipper­s from the nearby province of Beni Suef, and a pickup truck carrying laborers, all headed to the monastery.

Among the first to die were the drivers, like Atef Mounir, a 62-year-old constructi­on worker who was shot in the head. His nephew David Gamal recounted Mounir’s death based on the testimony from survivors of the attack.

“They said the terrorists made a group get out of their vehicles and took their phones,” he said, speaking from the hospital where he had come to identify his uncle’s body. “Then they shot everyone.”

Peter Edwar, a Christian activist who was among the first on the scene, said some men had been forced to say the shahada. Some witnesses reported the militants filmed the entire attack. Not everyone was forced out of their vehicles, which appeared to explain how dozens had survived.

“By the time they killed half of the people, the terrorists saw cars coming in the distance, and we think that that is what saved the rest,” said Magdy Malek, a lawmaker in Minya who visited victims of the attack Friday. “They did not have time to kill them all. They just shot at them randomly and then fled.”

The wounded were rushed to hospitals in Minya where doctors scrambled to save their lives. The medical staffs also had to contend with the anger and grief of hundreds of people searching for news about their relatives.

“Everyone is trying to identify the dead and wounded,” said Bishop Makarios, leader of the Copts in Minya. “There is no time for anger yet.”

Rattled community

In its determinat­ion to kill Christians, whom it gleefully terms as its “favorite prey,” the Islamic State has underscore­d its intent to wage a war of sectarian bloodshed in Egypt akin to the one it inflicted on Syria and Iraq.

Experts say the group is highly unlikely to get that far in Egypt, where el-Sissi remains firmly in control. Yet the attacks have badly rattled Egypt’s Christians, who account for about one-tenth of the country’s 92 million people, and raised urgent questions about el-Sissi’s ability to stem the violent tide.

“It shows a new focus on a soft targets for maximum carnage,” said Mokhtar Awad, an expert on Egyptian militancy at George Washington University. “Islamic State in Egypt is benefiting from new dedicated leadership and improved capabiliti­es.”

 ?? Amr Nabil / Associated Press ?? Relatives surround the coffins of Coptic Christian pilgrims who were killed during a bus attack Friday in Minya province, Egypt.
Amr Nabil / Associated Press Relatives surround the coffins of Coptic Christian pilgrims who were killed during a bus attack Friday in Minya province, Egypt.
 ?? Amr Nabil / Associated Press ?? Relatives of killed Coptic Christians grieve during their funeral Friday at Abu Garnous Cathedral in Minya, Egypt.
Amr Nabil / Associated Press Relatives of killed Coptic Christians grieve during their funeral Friday at Abu Garnous Cathedral in Minya, Egypt.

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