Mexico's foreign minister headed for Cairo Tuesday with relatives of
eight tourists mistakenly killed by Egyptian security forces to demand
an urgent inquiry into what she branded an "unjustified attack". Claudia Ruiz Massieu said she wanted answers on the attack that killed 12 people.The
bodies of six more Mexicans killed in Sunday's strike were identified
Tuesday, raising the number of dead from the Latin American nation to
eight .Six other wounded Mexicans remain in stable condition at Cairo's Al-Fouad Hospital.
Egypt
said the tourists entered a restricted area in the vast Western Desert
and were "mistakenly" killed as security forces chased jihadists who had
abducted and beheaded an Egyptian they said worked for the army.Ruiz
Massieu said Monday that six Mexican survivors told their ambassador
they had "suffered an aerial attack with bombs launched by a plane and
helicopters" after stopping for a roadside lunch."We face a
terrible loss of human lives and an unjustified attack that obligates
us to make the protection of our citizens the priority," Ruiz Massieu
said before departing accompanied by relatives of four of those killed
and doctors.
President
Abdel Fattah al-Sisi on Tuesday called his Mexican counterpart Enrique
Pena Nieto to say Egypt "stood alongside the victims' families" and was
giving "all necessary help" to the wounded, a statement said. The
incident has proven embarrassing to the Egyptian security forces which
regularly claim to have killed dozens of militants in air strikes, tolls
that are difficult to independently verify.
Hassan
al-Nahla, head of Egypt's tour guides union, said the tourist group had
received all the required permits and set off with a police escort from
Cairo to Bahariya oasis, roughly 350 kilometers (220 miles) away.
About 80 kilometers from their hotel, they veered two kilometers into the desert for lunch, he said in a statement.The place they chose for their picnic was a regular tourist stop, Nahla said later on television."I don't blame anyone but I ask who is responsible for coordination, and why was it absent?" If
the military is dealing with terrorists, why were the authorities who
issue permits not notified? Why was the tourism ministry not notified so
it could coordinate with the tourism companies?"
Nahla told AFP the area where they stopped had never been a restricted zone."There was no notification on the ground, and no coordination," he said of the security operation.
The
incident is likely to raise further fears for Egypt's vital tourism
industry, which has struggled to recover from years of turmoil. About 10 million tourists visited Egypt in 2014, down sharply from almost 15 million in 2010. Many
Egyptians on social media have criticized the government for suggesting
the tourists were at fault for straying into a restricted zone. The
Western Desert is popular with tour groups, but is also a militant
hideout, with Western embassies warning against non-essential travel
there. Last month, Egypt's branch of the Islamic State
group beheaded a Croatian oil worker who was abducted near Cairo, at the
edge of the Western Desert. IS in Egypt said on Sunday it
had "resisted a military operation in the Western Desert" and published
pictures of its fighters apparently engaging the military. Egypt
has struggled to quell a jihadist insurgency focused mainly in the
Sinai Peninsula in the east since the military overthrew Islamist
president Mohamed Morsi in 2013.The military last week
launched a wide-scale campaign to uproot militants in the peninsula,
claiming to have already killed more than 200 jihadists.Nine soldiers, including one killed in a roadside bombing Monday, have died in the operation, it said. Egypt's powerful and well-equipped military was further boosted by recent deliveries of warplanes from the US and France.
Cairo
says hundreds of police and soldiers have been killed, many in attacks
claimed by IS's Sinai Province affiliate which pledged allegiance to the
main group in Iraq and Syria last year.
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