Cairo — Egypt has
referred 48 people for military trial over suspected involvement in
church bombings that killed close to 70 people.
Bombings near
Cairo's Coptic Church December 2016 killed 25 people while two church
bombings April 9 2017, in Alexandria and Tanta killed more than 45
people during Palm Sunday services. Islamic State claimed
responsibility.
In a statement
dated May 21, Public prosecutor Nabil Sadek said that some of the
suspects held leadership positions in Islamic State of Iraq and Levant
group (ISIS) and that the leaders formed cells in Cairo and the southern
province of Qena to carry out the attacks, reported Reuters.
He noted that of
the 48 suspects, 31 are in custody while 17 are still at large and said
that they were suspected of undergoing training in ISIS military camps
in Libya and Syria.
The suspects are also accused of killing eight police officers and wounding three at a checkpoint on January 16.
The armed group has spread violence to the mainland and increasingly targeted Christian civilians in recent months.
During his visit to
Egypt in April 2017, Pope Francis condemned the religious violence
saying the country has a special role in, "Vanquishing all violence and
terrorism."
"Let us say once
more a firm and clear NO to every form of violence, vengeance and hatred
carried out by in the name of religion or in the name of God. It is our
duty to unmask the peddlers of illusions about afterlife, those who
preach hatred in order to rob simple people of their present life," he
told a peace conference in Cairo April 29.
The pope also met
head of Coptic Orthodox Church Pope Tawadros II and visited Cairo's
largest Coptic cathedral to pray for the 28 people killed during
Christmas season in the blast and lay flowers in their memory.
Source: allafrica.com
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