Islamic State claims deadly shooting of Egyptian Christians

Coptic Christians shout slogans after the funeral service of some of the victims of a bus attack, at Abu Garnous Cathedral in Minya, Egypt. Picture: Amr Nabil/AP

Coptic Christians shout slogans after the funeral service of some of the victims of a bus attack, at Abu Garnous Cathedral in Minya, Egypt. Picture: Amr Nabil/AP

Published May 27, 2017

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Cairo - Islamic State said on Saturday

that its fighters had carried out a shooting that killed dozens

of Egyptian Christians on Friday, according to a statement from

the group.

"A security unit from the soldiers of the caliphate set up a

checkpoint to ambush tens of Christians headed for the Saint

Samuel monastery west of the city of Minya," the statement said.

Eyewitnesses said on Friday that masked men boarded

several vehicles carrying Christians and opened fire at close

range, killing at least 29 and injuring 24. 

The witnesses said three vehicles were attacked. A bus and a car transporting children and families to the monastery of Saint Samuel the Confessor were the initial targets.

The gunmen fired at the windows then boarded the vehicles, shooting dead all the men and firing at the feet of the women and children. They also took all the gold the women were carrying, eyewitnesses said. Some children were killed.

When one of the gunmen's vehicles had a flat tyre, they stopped a truck carrying Christian workers, shot them and took their truck.

One of the gunmen had a camera, eyewitnesses said, indicating that the group behind the shootings might release footage of the attack in the future.

Safwat Bushra, an eyewitness from Edwa - a small town which like Dayr Jarnous lies in the province of Minya that is home to a sizable Christian minority - said he saw the shooting from the road where he was driving that morning.

He told Reuters that police at a checkpoint near the incident did not rush in to fight the gunmen and also did not allow an ambulance past the checkpoint.

"The officers and policemen at the checkpoints are known to have Islamist sympathies. Or at least they hate Copts," he said inside the church. Bushra was so enraged he had to be told by priests to calm down or leave.

A three-year-old and a four-year-old were killed, Bushra added.

On Friday thousands of Christians, weeping and praying, gathered at a church in Minya to mourn seven of their community who were among the more than two dozen shot dead.

Relatives of killed Coptic Christians grieve during their funeral at Abu Garnous Cathedral in Minya. Picture: Amr Nabil/AP

Their grief quickly turned to anger as funeral prayers at the Church of the Sacred Family in the village of Dayr Jarnous became a protest march with young men chanting as they carried a large wooden cross.

"With blood and soul, we will defend you, oh cross!" they yelled. "We will avenge them or die like them," they said. "There is no god but God and the Messiah is God!"

Friday's attack followed a series of church bombings claimed by Islamic State in a campaign of violence against Copts.

Seven of the 29 Christians killed came from Dayr Jarnous. Bishop Agathon, Bishop of the Maghagha and Edwa Diocese, led the funeral prayers which were spoken in Coptic, the last living descendant of the ancient Egyptian language.

Women dressed in black wept and wailed, some even slapped themselves on the face. One woman whose father was killed had a nervous breakdown and had to be carried away from the church by others.

Even the boy and girl scouts charged with organising the prayers and responsible for internal security in the church were crying.

"Did they deserve this? They were just going to work and then were killed," said one crying woman, who did not give her name, referring to the Christian workers.

"God will avenge us. We will not do anything violent because we are Christians and love is in our hearts. It is enough that they will go to hell," she said.

Reuters

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