Egypt vows to avenge Sinai
mosque massacre
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Egyptian media reports say at least 235
people have been killed in a bomb and
gun attack on a mosque in the country's
northern Sinai Peninsula.
The attack occurred in Bir al-Abed, a
town in North Sinai province, shortly
after Friday prayers.
Egyptian state media MENA put the
death toll at 235, citing an official
security source. It also said that 120
people were wounded in the attack.
The mosque in Bir al-Abed, about 40km
west of El Arish, the provincial capital
of North Sinai, was frequented by Sufis.
The government declared a three-day
period of mourning for the victims.
Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi
condemned the attack, which he
described as "criminal" and "cowardly"
in a televised statement on Friday.
He expressed condolences to the
victims and their families and said the
attack "will not go unpunished".
"The armed forces and the police will
avenge our martyrs and restore security
and stability with the utmost force," Sisi
said.
The Egyptian
military
launched air
strikes on
targets in
mountainous
areas around
Bir al-Abed
hours after the
attack, security
sources and
witnesses told Reuters news agency.
No group has claimed responsibility but
local affiliates of the Islamic State of
Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) group have
claimed previous attacks.
Officials said the attackers arrived in
four 4WD vehicles and carried out their
attack while the sermon was being
delivered after Friday prayers.
Local media reports said the attackers
planted explosives and then opened fire
on worshippers.
The attackers next targeted fleeing
worshipers with gunfire.
Images on Egyptian state TV showed
dozens of bodies covered in blood,
lying inside a mosque.
Most of their faces were covered with
white cloths, while other bodies were
wrapped in prayer rugs. Some men and
women could be seen next to the
bodies.
The previous attacks in Sinai mostly
targeted security forces and members of
Egypt's Coptic Christians minority.
However, mosques in North
Sinai's Sheikh Zuweid town have also
been attacked.
It is believed the Bir al-Abed mosque
was an easy target because it was
outside the province's main cities.
The mosque may also have been
targeted because it followed a Sufi sect.
Sufis are considered infidels by groups
such as ISIL.
In 2016, ISIL fighters released pictures
purporting to be of the execution of a
100-year-old Sufi religous leader, whom
they accused of "witchcraft".
Timothy Kaldas, a professor at Nile
University in Cairo, told Al Jazeera the
attack "fits the pattern of ISIS attacks".
"Potentially, it's another attack against
Sufis in northern Sinai. Potentially, it's
retaliation for tribes co-operating with
the state in the crackdown on ISIS," he
said, using another name for ISIL.
Kaldas said ISIL has been "more willing
to target civilians, as we saw with a lot
of attacks on the Egyptian-Christian
community in the past year".
Egypt has for years been battling an
armed anti-government campaign in
the rugged and thinly populated Sinai
Peninsula, which has gained pace since
the military overthrew democratically
elected President Mohamed Morsi of
the Muslim Brotherhood in mid-2013.
In 2014, following a suicide bombing
that killed 33 soldiers, Sisi declared a
state of emergency in the peninsula,
describing it as a "nesting ground for
terrorism and terrorists".
'Scorched earth strategy'
Kaldas said many people have criticised
the Egyptian government's "scorched
earth strategy" in Sinai, but conceded
that the area is "very challenging
terrain".
"It's a mountainous desert area that's
not very developed. Even with the best
strategy, it's a difficult place to control."
Local news
media reported
the closure
after Friday's
attack of the El
Arish-Rafah
road, further
east.
The attack also
came a day before the Rafah border
crossing, the main gateway for
Palestinians in the besieged Gaza Strip
to the outside world, was due to open
for a three-day period.
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