Eng/Gerالأرشيف

Militants Kill 235 in Attack on Sufi Mosque in Egypt بعد «مذبحة المصلين».. السيسي فشل في الوفاء بوعوده

“يؤكد فشل عبد الفتاح السيسي ،الذي أصر على أنه يحتاج لسحق المعارضة السياسية في معركته مع الإرهاب، في الوفاء بوعوده للمصريين”.
جاء ذلك في تقرير لصحيفة “نيويورك تايمز” الأمريكية بعد الهجوم الذي وقع اليوم الجمعة على مسجد الروضة في شمال سيناء، الذي وصفته بأنه “الأعنف على المدنيين في تاريخ مصر الحديث”، وقتل خلاله 235 شخصا وأصيب 109 آخرين.
وقالت الصحيفة،” حجم الهجوم وقسوته أصاب البلاد بصدمة كبيرة، ليس فقط بسبب عدد الوفيات، ولكن أيضا لاختيار الهدف، الهجمات على المساجد نادرة في مصر، وتنظيم داعش استهدف الكنائس، ولكنه تجنب دائما أماكن العبادة الإسلامية.
وأضافت،” الهجوم أضاف فئة جديدة لقوائم الإرهابيين لأن معظم الضحايا كانوا من المسلمين الصوفية، الذين يعتبرهم بعض المتطرفين “كفارا”، ويؤكد فشل الرئيس عبد الفتاح السيسي، الذي أصر على أنه يحتاج لسحق المعارضة السياسية في معركته لمكافحة الإرهاب، في الوفاء بوعوده الأمنية للمصريين”.
وقال السيسي في خطاب متلفز:” سنرد على الهجوم الارهابي في الروضة بقوة غاشمة”..؟؟؟

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ERq71tU3txw

 By DECLAN WALSH and NOUR YOUSSEF
CAIRO — Islamist militants detonated a bomb inside a crowded mosque on Friday and then sprayed gunfire on panicked worshipers as they fled the building, killing at least 235 people and wounding at least 109 others. Officials called it the deadliest terrorist attack in Egypt’s modern history.
The scale and ruthlessness of the assault, which occurred in a small town in the insurgency-racked Sinai Peninsula, sent shock waves across the nation, not just for the number of deaths but also for the choice of target. Attacks on mosques are rare in Egypt, where the Islamic State has targeted Coptic Christian churches and pilgrims but avoided Muslim places of worship.
The attack injected a new element into Egypt’s struggle with militants because most of the victims were Sufi Muslims, who practice a mystical form of Islam that some extremists deem heretical. And it underscored the failure of President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, who has insisted he needs to crush political opposition to combat the threat of Islamist militancy, to deliver on his promises of security to Egyptians.
“The scene was horrific,” said Ibrahim Sheteewi, a resident of Bir al-Abed, the north Sinai town where the attack took place. “The bodies were scattered on the ground outside the mosque. I hope God punishes them for this.”
A Sinai police officer said the dead included at least 15 children. A witness put the toll even higher, saying he had helped gather the bodies of 25 children.
The Egyptian military, which has been battling a local affiliate of the Islamic State in northern Sinai for years, carried out several airstrikes in the area targeting militants fleeing in four-wheel-drive vehicles, an Egyptian military official said.
Violence in Sinai surged after 2013, when Mr. Sisi came to power in a military takeover that deposed the democratically elected president, Mohamed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood.
Even by recent standards in Egypt, where militants have blown up Christian worshipers as they knelt at church pews and gunned down pilgrims in buses, it was an unusually ruthless assault.
“I can’t believe they attacked a mosque,” a Muslim cleric in Bir al-Abed said by phone, requesting anonymity for fear he could also be attacked. In recent months, the Islamic State had threatened and killed a number of Sufis there but it had not attacked a place of worship, the cleric said.
The attack started midday during Friday Prayers when a bomb — mostly likely set off by a suicide bomber, according to security officials — ripped through Al Rawda mosque in Bir al-Abed, a small town 125 miles northeast of Cairo. As worshipers fled, they were confronted with group of gunmen who, witnesses said, had pulled up outside in a four-wheel-drive vehicles.
Some of the gunmen rushed into the mosque, where they opened fire on the worshipers. Others waited outside, picking off those who had managed to flee.
Several women were wounded when they heard the gunfire and rushed to see what was happening, a Sinai police detective said. “When they saw the bodies, they started screaming and calling for help, so the terrorists shot them,” he said.
The gunmen lingered at the scene even as emergency workers arrived to treat the wounded, opening fire on several ambulances, Ahmed el-Ansari, a senior government health official, said on state television.
Mayna Nasser, 40, who was shot twice in the shoulder, drifted in and out of consciousness as he was rushed to a hospital. “My children were there, my children were there,” he said, according to Samy, a volunteer emergency medical worker who drove him there and who declined to give his last name.
Samy, who spoke by phone, said the emergency services in Bir al-Abed were so overwhelmed that some of the wounded had to be transported to the hospital in the back of cattle truck.
Many were taken to the general hospital in the the main northern Sinai town of El Arish, where medics described chaotic scenes as staff struggled to deal with a flood of dead and wounded. “They pretty much have bullets in every part of their bodies,” said one medical official, speaking by phone. Others had extensive burns or limbs lost from the explosion.
“We are swamped,” he said, speaking on condition of anonymity. “We don’t know what to say. This is insane.”
Mr. Sisi convened an emergency meeting of top security officials, including the interior minister, spy chief and defense minister.
“We will respond to the terrorist attack in Al Rawda,” he said in a televised speech, referring to the name of the mosque as well as the district that includes it. “The military and the police will take revenge.”
President Trump, writing on Twitter, denounced the attack as a “horrible and cowardly.” In a later tweet, he said the attack explains why the United States needs a border wall with Mexico and restrictions on immigration, which he referred to as “the ban.”
The United Nations Security Council, in a statement, condemned the “heinous and cowardly terrorist attack.” The United Nations secretary general, António Guterres, called for those responsible “to be swiftly brought to justice.”
No group has claimed responsibility for the attack, but the Egyptian military has been battling an Islamist militia in Sinai called Ansar Beit al-Maqdis. The group pledged allegiance to the Islamic State in 2014 and has since proved to be one of the Islamic State’s most effective local affiliates. The group’s deadliest attack targeted a Russian jetliner that crashed shortly after takeoff from Sharm el Sheikh in October 2015, killing all 224 people on board.
In an interview published in an Islamic State magazine last January, a commander in Sinai outlined the group’s hatred for Sufis and their practices, including veneration of tombs, the sacrificial slaughter of animals and what he termed “sorcery and soothsaying.”
The interview, in English, specifies Rawda, where Friday’s attack occurred, as one of three areas where Sufis live in Sinai that the group intended to “eradicate.”
describing Sufism as a “disease,” it has claimed attacks that have killed at least 130 worshipers at Sufi shrines, most of them in Pakistan. Elsewhere, the Islamic State has made a spectacle of bulldozing Sufi shrines, describing their removal as a form of purifying the faith.
Egyptian security forces have also been closely monitoring returning Islamic State fighters from Syria and Iraq, amid worries that an influx of battle-hardened jihadis could insert a volatile new element into Egypt’s militant mix.
The Egyptian authorities have been hoping to stem the tide of Islamist violence in Sinai through their sponsorship of a Palestinian peace initiative involving Hamas, the militant group that controls Gaza.
Islamic State militants have previously used tunnels into Gaza to source weapons and get medical treatment for wounded fighters. One benefit for Egypt of the peace initiative, which Egypt’s General Intelligence Directorate has mediated, is greater control over those tunnels.
Until the spate of attacks on Christian churches this year, Egyptian militants had avoided large-scale assaults on Egyptian civilians, perhaps because history taught that they tended to backfire. After a massacre in Luxor that killed 62 people, mostly tourists, in 1997, President Hosni Mubarak began a sweeping crackdown that crushed the Islamist insurgency centered in southern Egypt.
When a new insurgency flared in the north Sinai after the military takeover in 2013, the extremists leading it were careful to focus their attacks on the uniformed security forces they blamed for the military takeover. But as those militants embraced the Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL, they have gradually set aside that lesson.
In a statement, Hamas denounced the attack as a “criminal explosion” that “violates all heavenly commandments and human values” because it attacked a mosque. “It is a grave challenge to Muslims worldwide,” the group said.
In October, Mr. Sisi ordered a major reshuffle of his security team after an ambush in the desert left at least 16 Egyptian security officials dead. That attack was later claimed by a previously unknown group called Ansar al-Islam, which is believed to have links to Al Qaeda.
The New York Times

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