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Egypt police probe motives of Red Sea beach attacker

By AFP - Jul 15,2017 - Last updated at Jul 15,2017

Workers and security detain the man who stabbed two German tourists to death and wounded four others during an attack of the Zahabia hotel resort in Hurghada, south of the capital Cairo, Egypt, on Friday (Reuters photo)

HURGHADA, Egypt — Police on Saturday questioned the suspected extremist who stabbed to death two German women and wounded four others at a Red Sea beach resort, adding to the woes of Egypt's hobbled tourism industry.

Judicial sources said the man who had swum ashore from a public beach in Hurghada to carry out Friday's attack confessed to sharing the ideology of the Daesh terror group, although there was no Daesh claim of responsibility.

The sources said the suspect, a 28-year-old from Kafr Al Sheikh province in the Nile Delta, north of Cairo, has been transferred to the capital for questioning.

At the same time, the prosecution, said in a statement that it had not yet confirmed the assailant's motives and urged the media "to stop resorting to speculation or getting ahead of the investigation".

The streets of Hurghada were being heavily patrolled and security was stepped up outside hotels on Saturday.

"I was sitting down in my shop when we heard people shouting. We ran outside and heard that someone had swum to the next door hotel and was attacking foreigners," said Rafic Rushdi, the owner of a hotel shop.

"After killing two women, he ran towards our hotel. He was shouting that he was not after Egyptians, and some Egyptians intervened to stop him."

 

 'Cowardly crime' 

 

After initial confusion over the nationality of the women killed, Berlin on Saturday said they were both German nationals, rather than Ukrainians as earlier reported.

"I am very upset by this cowardly crime, my condolences to the families of the victims," German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel said.

Among the four others wounded were two Armenian women and a woman from the Czech Republic, according to authorities in those countries.

It was not the first attack in Hurghada. In January 2016, three tourists were wounded in a stabbing assault in the resort by two assailants with apparent IS sympathies.

In Tunisia, Daesh claimed a beach attack in June 2015 when a student armed with a Kalashnikov assault rifle and grenades went on a rampage near the Mediterranean resort of Sousse killing 38 holidaymakers, 30 of them Britons, before being shot dead by police.

Hurghada is one of Egypt's most popular beach resorts, especially with Ukrainians and other European tourists.

Egyptian authorities say they have boosted security at the country's tourist sites, as the industry provides the Arab world's most populous country with much-needed revenues.

A Daesh bombing of a Russian airliner carrying holidaymakers from a resort in the south of the Sinai Peninsula in 2015 killed all 224 people on board and decimated the country's tourism sector.

Russia suspended all flights to Egypt in response and has yet to resume them.

Daesh has been waging a deadly insurgency concentrated in the north of the Sinai that has killed hundreds of policemen and soldiers.

 

Police, Copts also targeted 

 

Also on Friday, unknown assailants shot dead five policemen just south of Cairo, in the latest of a series of attacks targeting Egypt's security forces.

The killings came as police and the army said they were closing in on militants and extremists following a spate of deadly attacks in the Nile Valley and the Sinai Peninsula.

Egypt has struggled to quell Daesh extremists based in the Sinai and smaller militant groups in the mainland since the military overthrew Islamist president Mohamed Morsi in 2013 and cracked down on his supporters.

While smaller groups such as the Hasam militant movement have mostly targeted policemen and government officials, Daesh has also attacked foreign tourists and Egypt's Coptic Christian minority.

Dozens of Christians have been killed in church bombings and shootings since last December in attacks claimed by Daesh.

 

The extremists have threatened to carry out further attacks on Copts, who make up about 10 per cent of Egypt's 90 million people.

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