Suspected suicide bomber kills 17 at Egypt church

Abu Talib

Feeling low
(Reuters) - A bomb killed at least 17 people outside a church in the Egyptian city of Alexandria early on New Year's Day, and the Interior Ministry said a foreign-backed suicide bomber may have been responsible.

Dozens of people were wounded by the blast, which scattered body parts, scorched cars and smashed windows. The attack prompted Christians to protest on the streets, and some Christians and Muslims hurled stones at each other.

Egypt, due to hold a presidential election in September, has stepped up security around churches, banning cars from parking directly outside them, since an al Qaeda-linked group in Iraq issued a threat against the Church in Egypt in November.

Pope Benedict, the head of the Roman Catholic Church, denounced violence against Christians in his New Year address and appealed for religious freedom and tolerance. He said he would host a summit of world religious leaders in Assisi in October to discuss how to promote world peace.

Saturday's blast did not originate in any of the cars that were destroyed, an interior ministry statement on the official news agency said. "It is likely that the device which exploded was carried by a suicide bomber who died among others," it said.

The circumstances of this attack, compared with other incidents abroad, "clearly indicates that foreign elements undertook planning and execution," the statement added.

President Hosni Mubarak promised in a televised address that the terrorists would not destabilize Egypt or divide Christians and Muslims, and said the attack "carries evidence of the involvement of foreign fingers....

Health Minister Hatem el-Gabaly told Reuters by telephone that there were 17 confirmed dead, 12 of them already identified as Christians. Five bodies had yet to be identified. He said initial assessments indicated 70 people were wounded.

State media earlier reported 21 killed in the blast, which struck as worshippers marking the New Year left the church. The ministry had initially blamed the explosion on a car bomb.

Christians make up about 10 percent of Muslim-majority Egypt's 79 million people. Tensions often flare between the two communities over issues such as building churches or close relationships between members of the two faiths.

PROTESTS

But analysts said this attack was on a much bigger scale and appeared far more organized than the kind of violence that usually erupts when communal frustrations boil over.

"This tragic incident certainly does not match any other sectarian assault that my organization has documented over the past few years," said rights campaigner Hossam Bahgat.

His group, the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights, has said the number of violent sectarian incidents has been rising.

After protests overnight, about 150 Christians protested again on Saturday near the Coptic Orthodox church that was hit. "We sacrifice our souls and blood for the cross," they chanted.
The al Qaeda-linked Islamic State of Iraq, which claimed an attack on a church in Baghdad in November, threatened Egypt's Church over its treatment of women the group said the Church was holding after they had converted to Islam.

"This is a scene from Baghdad," a witness told Reuters by telephone.

Alexandria governor Adel Labib "accused al Qaeda of planning the bombing," state television reported in a brief headline without giving further details.

Kameel Sadeeq, from the Coptic council in Alexandria, told Reuters: "People went in to church to pray to God but ended up as scattered limbs. This massacre has al Qaeda written all over, the same pattern Qaeda has adopted in other countries."

Mubarak called on the authorities swiftly to round up those behind the incident, MENA reported.

Last January, a drive-by shooting of six Christians and a Muslim policeman at a church in southern Egypt sparked protests.

In November, hundreds of Christians clashed with riot police, and with some Muslims who joined in, in Cairo in protest against a decision to halt construction of a church. Officials said the Christians had no license to build a church.

Two Christians died and dozens were hurt, medical sources said. More than 150 were detained.

Analysts say the state must address grievances such as those over laws making it easier to build a mosque than a church if it wants to stem such sectarian violence.

Officials are swift to play down sectarian differences and have been keen to emphasize national harmony after a November parliamentary election that opposition groups said was rigged, and before the presidential poll in September.

Mubarak, 82 and in power since 1981, is expected to run, if he is able to. Gallbladder surgery in March revived questions about his health, but he has returned to a full schedule.
 

justoneofmillion

Junior Member
:salam2:Whoever is committing such atrocities deserves the wrath of Allah swt forever,may they burn in hell for indiscriminately taking lives that Allah swt has made sacred.Now whether they are 'Muslim' or Mossad and CIA undercover agents working on behalf of the Israeli regime in it's attempt to recover from the incredible media blamage it has been worldwide subject to,since the war in Gaza and the Flotilla Attack ...Allahu Aalam.

Whoever the perpetrators of such heinous crimes are they are the enemies of Islam and Humanity.False flag operations were wide spread in Algeria when The F.I.S won the elections in the 90's.

They prevented them from governing with the help of western governments.Whole villages were slaughtered with swords,women were raped and babies boiled...etc.No Muslim would do that!.The ironic thing is that the areas who were afflicted were mostly areas were the Islamic party had the strongest support!Who would kill their own supporters...This has been enough documented everything is on data.

There is this ex Algerian military secret agent who lives in exile now somewhere in Europe ,he spoke about it on Al Jazeera at the risk of his life by saying that it was the military who used to launch this type of operation and blame it on the Muslims to discredit them in the eyes of the population that supported them in the majority.For years everybody tought it was the muslims subhanallah but now the truth is coming out .How wicked humans can be!If I came across such animals I would fight them to death, whoever they are.
 
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