Boston Herald

Egyptian Christians bury dead from ISIS attack

-

MINYA, Egypt — Hundreds of Egyptian Christians attended a funeral service yesterday after seven people were killed in an ambush by Islamic State militants of buses carrying pilgrims to a remote desert monastery. The service at Prince Tadros church in the central city of Minya was held amid tight security. Minya’s top cleric, Anba Makarios, led prayers over a row of six white coffins, all victims from the same family. A separate funeral was held for the seventh victim, a bus driver. Relatives of the victims cried and held each other for support. Some rested their heads on the coffins and wept. A list of the victims’ names released by the church said a 15-year-old boy and a 12-year-old girl were among the dead. Nineteen were wounded in the attack, according to the church. Aida Shehata, who was shot in her legs, said masked men opened fire on three buses from different directions. Two of the buses were able to speed away and reach the monastery, but the militants stopped the third one and killed the driver and six of the passengers, including her husband and his brother. “The driver tried to go to the monastery but they (the militants) were faster,” Shehata told a Coptic TV network. An Islamic State affiliate based in the restive northern Sinai Peninsula claimed the attack, calling it revenge for the imprisonme­nt of “our chaste sisters,” without elaboratin­g. The attack cast a shadow on one of President AbdelFatta­h el-Sissi’s showpieces — the World Youth Forum — which opened yesterday in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh. The forum is drawing thousands of local and foreign youth to discuss a wide range of topics, with Egypt’s 63-year-old leader taking center stage. In an apparent effort to keep the attack from overshadow­ing the start of the three-day conference, two state-owned newspapers ran front-page banner headlines about the forum. Akhbar alYoum ran a large photo of elSissi cycling in Sharm elSheikh. Its reference to the attack lower down in the page made no mention of casualties. IS has repeatedly targeted Egypt’s Christians as punishment for their support of elSissi, who led the military’s 2013 ouster of an elected but divisive Islamist president. El-Sissi, who has made security among his top priorities since taking office in 2014, wrote on his Twitter account that Friday’s attack was designed to harm the “nation’s solid fabric” and pledged to continue fighting terrorism. He later offered his condolence­s when he spoke by telephone with Pope Tawadros II, spiritual leader of Egypt’s Orthodox Christians and a close ally of the president. Begemy Nassem Nasr, the priest of the church of St. Mary in the central Egyptian city of Minya, near where the attack took place, suggested it was meant to embarrass el-Sissi as he hosted the youth forum. “I think that this is a terrorist act which is targeting Egypt through playing the card of the Copts,” he said.

 ?? AP PHOTOS ?? AMBUSH VICTIMS: Coptic Christian mourners, above and top, carry the coffins of three of the seven people killed in an ambush Friday by ISIS militants, after their funerals at the Church of Great Martyr Prince Tadros in Minya, Egypt, yesterday.
AP PHOTOS AMBUSH VICTIMS: Coptic Christian mourners, above and top, carry the coffins of three of the seven people killed in an ambush Friday by ISIS militants, after their funerals at the Church of Great Martyr Prince Tadros in Minya, Egypt, yesterday.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States