Egypt: At least 28 dead as gunmen fire on bus carrying Coptic Christians
At least 28 people were killed in Egypt after unidentified gunmen opened fire on a bus carrying Coptic Christians in what officials are calling a terror attack.
Ten
assailants wearing fatigues and face masks fired on the passengers from
three four-wheel drive vehicles on a desolate stretch of desert road,
Egypt's Interior Ministry told CNN.
Hours
later, Egypt responded with airstrikes against terrorist camps,
President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi said in an on-camera statement, according
to state-run Nile TV.
The
Christians were traveling Friday to a monastery, St. Samuel the
Confessor, around 100 km (62 miles) northwest of the city of Minya when
they came under fire, the ministry said.
Twenty-three
others were injured, some of whom are now in critical condition, Minya
Gov. Essam El-Bedewy told Egyptian satellite channel ONTV.
Men, women and children are among the dead and injured, officials said.
The
exact location of Friday's airstrikes was unclear but Nile TV reported
that Egypt has targeted terrorists in the Sinai Peninsula and on the
border with Libya.
In
a statement Friday, President Donald Trump said the "merciless
slaughter of Christians in Egypt tears at our hearts and grieves our
souls."
"Wherever
innocent blood is spilled, a wound is inflicted upon humanity," the
statement said. "But this attack also steels our resolve to bring
nations together for the righteous purpose of crushing the evil
organizations of terror, and exposing their depraved, twisted, and
thuggish ideology."
The attack comes as the country is still under a three-month state of emergency period following twin attacks on Coptic churches on Palm Sunday last month that killed dozens of people. ISIS claimed responsibility for those attacks.
It
was not immediately clear who was responsible for the shooting, but
Coptic Christians have been targeted by ISIS militants several times in
recent years and ongoing violence has triggered a mass exodus of Coptic Christians from some towns.
Spate of attacks
Coptic
Christians make up about 10% of Egypt's population of 91 million. They
base their theology on the teachings of the apostle Mark, who introduced
Christianity to Egypt.
Persecution and discrimination against Egypt's Coptic Christians has spiked since the toppling of Hosni Mubarak's regime in 2011.
In December, an attack on a Coptic church in Cairo killed 25 people.
Coptic
churches and homes have been set on fire, members of the Coptic
minority have been physically attacked, and their property has been
looted, rights group Amnesty International reported in March.
A church in Minya was torched in 2013, gutting its interior.
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