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Egypt Coptic priest shot dead in Daesh-claimed Sinai attack

By AFP - Jul 01,2016 - Last updated at Jul 01,2016

Egyptian jet fighters trail smoke as they fly over Tahrir Square in the capital Cairo on Thursday, during a celebration of the third anniversary of the protests that led to the ousting of president Mohamed Morsi (AFP photo)

CAIRO — An Egyptian Coptic priest was shot dead Thursday in the Sinai Peninsula where authorities are battling a extremist insurgency, officials said, in an attack claimed by the Daesh terror group.

Raphael Moussa, 46, died instantly when a man shot him in the head as he was standing next to his car in El Arish, the capital of North Sinai, said Boulos Halim, a church spokesman.

The Daesh group’s Egypt branch claimed responsibility for the murder in a statement posted on social media, accusing him of “combating Islam”.

Moussa had earlier left a church where he attended mass, Halim said.

The interior ministry said the priest was gunned down after having gone to an area of El Arish with mechanics to have his car repaired.

The Daesh affiliate in restive Sinai has waged an insurgency that has killed hundreds of policemen and soldiers. 

It has kept up the attacks, mostly roadside bombings and ambushes, despite a massive military campaign to uproot extremists from the peninsula bordering Israel and the Palestinian Gaza Strip.

Moussa was not the first priest killed in Arish.

Mina Aboud, a fellow priest, was shot dead on July 6, 2013, three days after the military toppled Egypt’s Islamist president Mohamed Morsi, unleashing clashes and a crackdown on his supporters.

Pro-Islamists attacked and torched dozens of churches and Christian properties a month later, after police killed hundreds of Morsi supporters in Cairo clashes.

They accused the Coptic minority of supporting the overthrow of Morsi, whom the army deposed after millions of Egyptians rallied to demand his resignation.

Leading Muslim clerics, as well as the opposition and the Coptic Orthodox Church, supported his overthrow after a year of divisive rule.

Apart from Christians and security forces, extremists in Sinai have also targeted Muslims they accuse of working with the government. 

They have likewise attacked foreign tourists and beheaded a Croatian oil worker after abducting him near Cairo.

Daesh claimed responsibility for last October’s bombing of a Russian airliner carrying holidaymakers from a resort in southern Sinai, killing all 224 people on board.

“The whole situation in El Arish and North Sinai is under threat,” said Halim. “Many people [Christians] have left.” Copts, who make up about 10 per cent of Egypt’s 90-million population, faced persecution and discrimination during the 30-year rule of president Hosni Mubarak, who was toppled by a popular uprising in 2011.

 

Dozens have been killed in sectarian attacks and clashes across Egypt.

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