Egyptian air raid kills 'terrorist'
mosque attackers
NEWS / SINAI PENINSULA
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Wounded people are evacuated from the scene
of the mosque attack on Friday [The Associated
Press]
The Egyptian army says an air raid
killed some of the attackers involved in
Friday's massacre when at least 305
people died in a bomb-and-gun attack
on a mosque.
In a statement late on Friday, army
spokesman Tamer Rifai said the
Egyptian air force chased down the
assailants who, according to officials,
arrived in four 4WD vehicles and
carried out the attack during noon
prayers.
"The air forces chased the terrorists and
discovered and destroyed a number of
vehicles that were involved in carrying
out the brutal terrorist attack ... Those
on board were also killed," Rifai said.
The massacre occurred in Bir al-Abed, a
town in North Sinai province.
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The mosque - about 40km west of el-
Arish, the provincial capital of North
Sinai - was frequented by followers of
Sufism, a more mystical form of Islam .
Bir al-Abed North Sinai map [Al Jazeera]
No group has claimed responsibility,
but according to a statement on
Saturday from Egypt's public
prosecutor, the attackers were carrying
a flag representing the Islamic State of
Iraq and the Levant group (ISIL , also
known as ISIS). The government
declared a three-day period of
mourning for the victims.
Egyptian state media MENA said 120
people were also wounded in the
attack.
President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi
condemned the assault, which he
described as "criminal" and "cowardly"
in a televised statement on Friday.
He 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.
Egypt has for years battled an armed,
anti-government campaign on the
rugged and thinly populated Sinai
Peninsula . The campaign 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 on the peninsula,
describing it as a "nesting ground for
terrorism and terrorists".
Previous
attacks in Sinai
mostly aimed
at security
forces and
members of
Egypt's Coptic
Christian
minority.
However,
mosques in North Sinai's Sheikh
Zuweid town have also been hit.
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 was attended by
members of the Sufi sect, who are
considered infidels by armed groups
such as ISIL.
In 2016, ISIL fighters released images
purportedly showing the execution of a
100-year-old Sufi religious leader,
whom they accused of "witchcraft".
Timothy Kaldas, a professor at Nile
University in Cairo, told Al Jazeera that
Friday's assault "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.
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".
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