The Mercury News

Egypt attack targets Christian minority

Gunman on motorcycle opens fire outside church in Cairo

- By Menna Zaki

CAIRO >> A gunman on a motorcycle opened fire Friday outside a church in a Cairo suburb and at a nearby store, sparking a shootout that killed at least nine people, including eight Coptic Christians, Egyptian authoritie­s said. It was the latest attack targeting the country’s embattled Christian minority.

The gunman was also killed, along with at least one police officer, officials said.

The attack began when the gunman tried to break through the security cordon outside the Coptic Church of Mar Mina. It was not clear how many assailants were involved. Egypt’s Interior Ministry referred to only one, but the Coptic Orthodox church mentioned “gunmen.”

Five people were wounded, including another police officer, Health Ministry spokesman Khaled Megahed said.

The attack came amid tightened security around churches and Christian facilities ahead of the Coptic Orthodox Christian celebratio­ns of Christmas on Jan. 7. Police have been stationed outside churches and in nearby streets across Cairo. President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi has personally chaired meetings with his top security chiefs in recent days to discuss security during New Year’s Eve and the Orthodox Christmas.

A video circulatin­g on social media after Friday’s attack apparently showed the gunman lying on the ground with his face covered in blood. Authoritie­s closed off the area around the church.

The Interior Ministry identified the assailant as Ibrahim Ismail Mostafa, who, the agency said, was involved in several previous militant attacks. The Interior Ministry said he was wounded and arrested but made no mention of his death, which was reported by the Health Ministry.

The assailant had earlier opened fire at the nearby store owned by a Christian, the Interior Ministry said.

No group took immediate responsibi­lity for the attack, which bore the hallmarks of Islamic militants, who for years have battled security forces in Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula in an insurgency now led by a local affiliate of the extremist Islamic State group. It is centered in the turbulent northern part of Sinai but has also carried out attacks in the mainland.

The militants are targeting mainly security personnel and Egypt’s Coptic Christian minority.

The latest attack, in the southern Cairo suburb of Helwan, showcases the difficulti­es faced by security forces in containing an insurgency that is growing in sophistica­tion and brutality. The assault came a little more than a month after militants killed 311 worshipper­s inside a mosque in Sinai, the deadliest attack by militants on civilians in Egypt’s modern history.

Samir Gerges, a witness to Friday’s church attack, said people inside the church closed the gates when the shooting began but that some bullets penetrated the building. Gerges said he was walking along a nearby street when the gunfire broke out. He saw people running and some taking cover in a nearby restaurant.

Another witness, 40-yearold Raouth Atta, was praying inside the church when the violence broke out.

Once she was able to leave, Atta said, she saw blood everywhere.

 ?? AMR NABIL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Priest David, the head of Mar Mina church, is greeted by people outside the church in Helwan, Cairo, Egypt, on Friday where at least nine people have been killed.
AMR NABIL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Priest David, the head of Mar Mina church, is greeted by people outside the church in Helwan, Cairo, Egypt, on Friday where at least nine people have been killed.

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