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Sisi: bomber behind church attack, four captured

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CAIRO: Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al Sisi said on Monday that a bomber carried out an attack that killed 24 people at Cairo’s main cathedral and security forces had arrested three men and a woman in connection with the bombing.


Speaking at a state funeral for the victims, Sisi identified the suicide bomber as 22-year-old Shafik Mahmoud Mohamed Mostafa. He said security forces were seeking another two fugitives believed to be involved in the attack.


He called for tighter laws to help deter future attacks.


Meanwhile, mourners packed an Egyptian church on Monday for the funeral of 24 people killed in a bomb attack at Cairo’s Coptic cathedral and angry survivors said police had failed to protect the Christian minority.


Tearful relatives gathered at the Virgin Mary and St Athanasius Church in Cairo where Coptic Pope Tawadros II prayed over the wooden coffins of victims of Sunday’s bombing, one of the deadliest to target Christians in recent memory.


On the walls hung banners bearing the names of the dead, many of them women.


Speaking after the funeral service, during which he shed tears, Pope Tawadros called the dead martyrs and sought to heal any friction caused by the attack, saying it “is not just a disaster for the church but a disaster for the whole nation.” He also condemned attacks against the security forces.“Those who commit acts such as this do not belong to Egypt at all, even if they are on its land,” he said.


At least 24 people died and 49 were wounded when a bomb exploded in a chapel adjoining St Mark’s Cathedral, Cairo’s largest church and seat of the Coptic papacy, where security is normally tight.


The blast was caused by a bomb containing at least 12 kg of TNT detonated on a side of the church used by women.


The chapel’s floor was covered in debris from shattered windows, its wooden pews blasted apart, its pillars blackened. Here and there lay abandoned shoes and patches of blood. Dazed church officials wondered around in their black robes.


Several hundred people gathered in the Madinat Nasr area furious at being denied entry to the funeral ceremony, where admittance was by invitation only. Security sources said police, concerned over mounting anger, detained at least 25 youths.


“They beat them up because they were chanting. Now they switched off their phones and we can’t find them,” said Atef Kamel, whose brother and cousin were taken away by police.


“They came to attend the funeral, so they got arrested... Isn’t it enough what has already happened to us?”


There was also anger at hospitals treating the wounded.


Five survivors at Dar al Shefa Hospital said police did not conduct the usual checks as the cathedral was particularly busy for Sunday’s mass, which took place on a public holiday marking the Prophet Mohammad’s birthday, just weeks before Christmas.


“There were large numbers so people entered without being searched,” said Mina Francis, who was at the mass with his mother, who was killed.


President Abdel Fattah al Sisi, who announced three days of mourning and promised justice, is to attend a public ceremony later on Monday.


Sisi is fighting battles on several fronts. His economic reforms have angered the poor, a crackdown on the Brotherhood has seen thousands jailed and an insurgency rages in Northern Sinai, led by IS’s Egyptian branch.


The group has also claimed attacks in Cairo and urged its supporters to launch attacks around the world as it goes on the defensive in its Iraqi and Syrian strongholds. There was no immediate claim of responsibility, but exiled Brotherhood officials and other fighter groups condemned the church attack. — Reuters


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