The Columbus Dispatch

235 killed in mosque attack

- By Declan Walsh and Nour Youssef

TERRORISM

CAIRO — Militants detonated a bomb inside a crowded mosque in the Sinai Peninsula on Friday and then sprayed gunfire on panicked worshipper­s as they fled, killing at least 235 people and wounding at least 109 others. Officials called it the deadliest terrorist attack in Egypt’s modern history.

The scale and ruthlessne­ss of the assault, in an area racked by an Islamic insurgency, sent shock waves across the nation — not just for the number of deaths but also for the choice of target. Attacks on mosques

are rare in Egypt, where the Islamic State has targeted Coptic Christian churches and pilgrims but avoided Muslim places of worship.

The attack injected a new element into Egypt’s struggle with militants because most of the victims were Sufi Muslims, who practice a mystical form of Islam that the Islamic State and other Sunni extremist groups deem heretical. And it underscore­d the failure of President AbdelFatta­h el-Sissi, who has justified his harsh crackdown on political freedom in the name of crushing Islamic militancy, to deliver on his promises of security.

“The scene was horrific,” said Ibrahim Sheteewi, a resident of Bir al-Abd, the small north Sinai town where the attack took place. “The bodies were scattered on the ground outside the mosque. I hope God punishes them for this.”

A Sinai police officer said the dead included at least 15 children. A witness put the toll even higher, saying he had helped gather the bodies of 25 children.

Hours later, the Egyptian military carried out several airstrikes near Bir al-Abd targeting militants fleeing in fourwheel-drive vehicles, an Egyptian military official said.

World leaders quickly condemned the attack on the mosque, with President Donald Trump denouncing it as “horrible and cowardly.”

El-Sissi has struggled to impose his authority over Sinai since he came to power in a military takeover in 2013. Islamic militants who had found a safe haven in Sinai for attacks on Israel then turned their guns on the Egyptian armed forces.

But even by recent standards in Egypt, where militants have blown up Christian worshipper­s as they knelt at church pews and gunned down pilgrims in buses, the attack on Friday was unusually ruthless.

“I can’t believe they attacked a mosque,” a Muslim cleric in Bir al-Abd said by phone, requesting anonymity for fear he could be attacked.

No group claimed responsibi­lity for the attack, but in the past year a local affiliate of the Islamic State has killed a number of Sufis in the area and singled out the district where the attack took place as a potential target.

The attack started midday during Friday prayers when a bomb — probably set off by a suicide bomber, security officials said — ripped through Al Rawda mosque in Bir al-Abd, 125 miles northeast of Cairo. As worshipper­s fled, they were confronted by masked gunmen who, witnesses said, had pulled up outside in several fourwheel-drive vehicles.

The gunmen set fire to cars parked outside the mosque to hinder escape and opened fire on ambulances as they arrived on the scene, a government official said on state television.

Mayna Nasser, 40, who was shot twice in the shoulder, drifted in and out of consciousn­ess as he was rushed to a hospital. “My children were there, my children were there,” he said, according to Samy, a volunteer emergency worker who declined to give his last name.

Local emergency services were so overwhelme­d that some of the wounded had to be transporte­d to the hospital in the back of a cattle truck, he said.

Many were taken to the general hospital in the main northern Sinai town of El Arish, where medics described chaotic scenes as staff members struggled to deal with a flood of dead and wounded, many with extensive burns or severed limbs.

“We are swamped,” said one medical official, speaking by phone on condition of anonymity. “We don’t know what to say. This is insane.”

Other victims, like Mohammed Abdel Salam, a 22-year-old constructi­on worker, ended up in a hospital in the nearby city of Ismailia. “I wish I never stopped to pray,” he said. “I’m not even a Sufi. I was just there by accident.”

El-Sissi convened an emergency meeting of top security officials, including the interior minister, spy chief and defense minister. “The military and the police will take revenge,” he said in a televised speech.

Many residents of Bir al-Abd, on the main road through northern Sinai, are Bedouins from the Abu Greir tribe, which is predominan­tly Sufi. Residents said that despite recent Islamic State threats, the town had been largely peaceful.

Friday’s attack was a blow to Egypt’s hopes that it could stem the tide of Islamic violence in Sinai through the government’s sponsorshi­p of a Palestinia­n peace initiative involving Hamas, the militant group that controls the Gaza Strip.

Islamic State militants have previously used tunnels into Gaza to obtain weapons and get medical treatment for wounded fighters. One benefit for Egypt of the peace initiative, which Egypt’s General Intelligen­ce Directorat­e has mediated, is greater control over those tunnels.

In a statement, Hamas denounced the attack as a “criminal explosion” that “violates all heavenly commandmen­ts and human values” because it attacked a mosque. “It is a grave challenge to Muslims worldwide,” the group said.

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 ?? [AMR NABIL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? Relatives of Sheikh Sulieman Ghanem, 75, surround him Friday as he receives medical treatment at the Suez Canal University hospital in Ismailia, Egypt. Ghanem was among those injured in the attack on a mosque.
[AMR NABIL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] Relatives of Sheikh Sulieman Ghanem, 75, surround him Friday as he receives medical treatment at the Suez Canal University hospital in Ismailia, Egypt. Ghanem was among those injured in the attack on a mosque.

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