The Columbus Dispatch

Egypt says it killed 19 militants after 7 Christians die in attack

- By Declan Walsh

CAIRO — Egypt said Sunday that it had killed 19 militants linked to an ambush that left seven Christian pilgrims dead, as President AbdelFatta­h el-Sissi scrambled to respond to a surge of Christian anger against his government.

The Interior Ministry said Egyptian forces killed the militants during a chase through a mountainou­s area in the desert west of the ancient monastery where gunmen had opened fire on three buses filled with pilgrims Friday.

Six of the seven pilgrims killed in the attack came from the same extended family, Coptic Orthodox officials said.

The announceme­nt Sunday was accompanie­d by graphic photograph­s of bloodied bodies in the sand. But it offered few details about the circumstan­ces of the raid, including its timing or whether the government had experience­d any casualties.

Egypt routinely publicizes such raids, yet questions persist about why the security forces are unable to stop militant attacks. Outrage over Friday’s attack — the deadliest against Christians in almost a year — was fanned by the fact that militants carried out a similar ambush at almost the same location in May 2017, killing 28 pilgrims.

At a funeral in Minya on Saturday, hundreds of mourners jeered loudly and wagged their fingers after a Coptic bishop publicly thanked the security forces and government officials.

In the attack Friday, gunmen opened fire on three buses soon after they left the Monastery of St. Samuel, in the desert south of Cairo, killing the seven people in one bus and wounding 19 others in total, according to Coptic Church officials.

The Islamic State group claimed responsibi­lity, saying on its Amaq news service that the attack had been in retaliatio­n for the arrest of “our chaste sisters.” It did not elaborate.

Egypt’s State Informatio­n Service called the attack “a desperate attempt” that showed the group’s weakness. But it also renewed doubts about the effectiven­ess of Egyptian strategy against the powerful local Islamic State affiliate, which has expanded beyond its Sinai stronghold in recent years to attack Christians in churches and major cities and outside monasterie­s.

“The reality is that the Islamic State has successful­ly executed an attack on the same road, next to the same monastery, one year apart,” said Timothy E. Kaldas, an analyst with the Tahrir Institute for Middle East Policy. “That really calls into question the quality of government efforts to enhance security, particular­ly in Minya, where the Christian minority has been targeted relentless­ly.”

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