Regina Leader-Post

Mexico outraged by tourists’ deaths

- MAGDY SAMAAN AND LOUISE LOVELUCK

CAIRO — Mexican officials have reacted furiously to explanatio­ns by Egyptian security forces for how they killed 12 people, including eight Mexican tourists, by opening fire on them as they had lunch in the Western Desert.

Helicopter­s apparently chasing a kidnap gang, feared to be connected to ISIL, mistook the party’s jeeps as they stopped for a picnic in the dunes on Sunday afternoon.

After a long delay, the Egyptian Interior Ministry said a police and military operation “chasing terrorist elements” had “mistakenly” targeted jeeps carrying the Mexicans and their Egyptian tour guides.

But local residents and relatives of the guides said the helicopter­s fired without warning.

“After the first shell, they tried to run,” said Mohamed Salama, the nephew of a desert guide who died. “There was no place to hide. Six bodies are completely carbonized and the vehicles were destroyed as well.

“Security had been informed of the trip’s schedule and had been provided with a security detail. They registered the numbers of the cars in the hotel, according to the security regulation­s.”

The police guard was injured in the attack.

Salama’s uncle, Nabil al- Tamawi, is a well-known guide specializi­ng in leading tours for meditation, including in the desert. The group had stopped near Bahariya Oasis, 400 kilometres southwest of Cairo, and some were taking photograph­s when the helicopter­s opened fire.

Amr Imam, a cousin of another of the dead tour guides, Awad Fathi, 41, who also managed a nearby ecolodge, said authoritie­s had tried to suppress news of the incident until he posted details on social media.

“The corpses are still lying in the desert,” he said. “Awad’s brothers were trying to reach it but they were told by the security that the prosecutio­n must review the situation before they were moved.”

He denied the authoritie­s’ claims the group was in a restricted zone. The desert was once a popular tourist destinatio­n, but ISIL loyalists moved into the area last year, causing Egypt’s army to limit tourist traffic.

Egypt has criminaliz­ed publicatio­n of details contradict­ing official statements on terror-related incidents. But Monday, state institutio­ns failed to explain how the tragedy had unfolded.

The Mexican foreign secretary, Claudia Ruiz Massieu, said survivors described “an aerial attack with bombs launched by a plane and helicopter­s.”

Mexico expressed its “deep dismay over these deplorable events” in a diplomatic note to Cairo’s ambassador, demanding a “swift, exhaustive and deep investigat­ion.”

Security forces on the ground reportedly fired on remaining members of the convoy as they fled. As well as the eight Mexicans and four Egyptians killed, six Mexicans and four others were transferre­d to hospital.

 ?? CRIS BOURONCLE/AFP/Getty Images ?? The Bahariya oasis, located 400 kilometres southwest of Cairo in Egypt’s vast Western Desert, is the tourist magnet whereMexic­ans mistaken for jihadists were part of a group of 12 people killed by security forces.
CRIS BOURONCLE/AFP/Getty Images The Bahariya oasis, located 400 kilometres southwest of Cairo in Egypt’s vast Western Desert, is the tourist magnet whereMexic­ans mistaken for jihadists were part of a group of 12 people killed by security forces.

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