Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Survivors describe Sinai mosque attack

Militants killed 305 worshipper­s, 128 injured

- Maggie Michael and Hamza Hendawi

ISMAILIA, Egypt – They arrived in five SUVs, took positions across from the mosque’s door and windows, and just as the imam was about to deliver his Friday sermon from atop the pulpit, they opened fire and tossed grenades at the estimated 500 worshipper­s inside. When the violence finally stopped, more than 300 people, including 27 children, had been killed and 128 wounded.

As the gunfire rang out and the blasts shook the mosque, worshipper­s screamed and cried out in pain. A stampede broke out in the rush toward a door leading to the washrooms. Others tried desperatel­y to force their way out of the windows.

Those who survived spoke of children screaming as they saw parents and older brothers mowed down by gunfire or shredded by the blasts. Some marveled at their narrow escape from a certain death. Some families lost all or most male members in the massacre.

So composed were the militants that they methodical­ly checked their victims for any sign of life after the initial round of blazing gunfire. Those still moving or breathing received a bullet to the head or the chest, the witnesses said. When the ambulances arrived, they shot at them, repelling them as they got back into their vehicles and fled.

Friday’s assault was Egypt’s deadliest attack by Islamic extremists in the country’s modern history, a grim milestone in a long-running fight against an insurgency led by a local affiliate of the Islamic State group. Al-Rawdah Mosque was in a sleepy village by the same name in Egypt’s troubled northern Sinai, near the small town of Bir al-Abd.

A statement by the country’s chief prosecutor, Nabil Sadeq, said the attackers, some masked, numbered between 25 and 30. Those with bare faces sported heavy beards and long hair, it added. Clad in military-style camouflage pants and black T-shirts, one of them carried a black banner with a declaratio­n of the Muslim faith. The banner matched those carried by IS, which has not claimed responsibi­lity for the attack.

They also torched seven cars parked outside the mosque that belonged to worshipper­s, the statement added.

The chief prosecutor’s statement was the most detailed account given by authoritie­s and it generally agreed with what witnesses told The Associated Press on Saturday in the Suez Canal city of Ismailia, where some of the wounded are hospitaliz­ed.

“We knew that the mosque was under attack by (militants),” said witness Ebid Salem Mansour recalling the intense gunfire. Mansour, a 38-year-old worker in a nearby salt factory, said he had settled in Bir al-Abd three years ago to escape the bloodshed and fighting elsewhere in northern Sinai. He suffered two gunshot wounds to his legs on Friday.

“Everyone lay down on the floor and kept their heads down. If you raised your head you get shot,” he said. “The shooting was random and hysterical at the beginning and then became more deliberate. Whoever they weren’t sure was dead or still breathing was shot dead.”

Mansour added. “I knew I was injured but I was in a situation that was much scarier than being wounded. I was only seconds away from a certain death,” he said.

 ?? AMR NABIL/AP ?? Sulieman Awad receives medical treatment at the Suez Canal University hospital in Ismailia, Egypt, on Saturday.
AMR NABIL/AP Sulieman Awad receives medical treatment at the Suez Canal University hospital in Ismailia, Egypt, on Saturday.

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