At least 12 people were
killed and 10 injured in Egypt's southwestern desert Sunday when security
forces mistakenly fired on a group of Mexican tourists, Egyptian officials
said. The
Mexican Foreign Ministry confirmed the incident and said at least two of the
dead were Mexican nationals. It said in a statement that the victims were still
being identified, and Foreign Ministry personnel were working with the families
of the victims.
A
joint military-police force was pursuing "terrorist elements" in the
area and fired on four cars that turned out to be carrying tourists, according
to Egypt's Interior Ministry. The ministry said the victims were Mexican and
Egyptian.
The
tour company involved "did not have permits and did not inform
authorities," Rasha Azazi, a spokesperson for the Egyptian Ministry of
Tourism, told The Associated Press, adding that any trips to the Farafra area
are required to be cleared by officials.
Associated
Press report continues:
"They
were not supposed to be there," she said, but could not provide further
information on the circumstances of the shooting.
Mexican
Foreign Minister Claudia Ruiz Massieu was in contact with Egypt's ambassador to
Mexico and demanded a thorough investigation into and explanation of what
happened, the Mexican statement said. She also demanded the support of Egyptian
authorities for Mexican nationals being transported to Cairo.
Jorge
Alvarez Fuentes, Mexico's ambassador to Egypt, and consular representatives
were at the Dar el-Fouad Hospital in suburban Cairo, and Alvarez had
interviewed five survivors, the Foreign Ministry statement said. It did not
provide details of what the survivors said.
Egypt has been battling an
Islamic insurgency in northern Sinai for years, but attacks mainly targeting
the army and police escalated and spread to the mainland after the July 2013
military ouster of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi.
No comments:
Post a Comment