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Montag, 17. Dezember 2018
EGYPT BUS ATTACK SURVIVORS ASK ‘HOW COULD THIS HAPPEN AGAIN?
fero, 15:27h
Egypt’s Copts are still reeling from a second bus attack in two years on the desert road to a monastery in Minya and asking why there was no protection for them.
It should have been a joyful day. On Friday 2 November a Coptic family had celebrated the baptisms of two little boys, four-month-old Emile and 5-month-old Noufir, which had taken place in the morning at St Samuel’s monastery. In a cheerful mood, listening to Christian songs in the bus, they started their journey back home. Then, suddenly, guns were fired from a four-wheel drive that had come alongside the bus, carrying four masked men who looked like soldiers.
The 28 family members on board all ducked for cover, including Sameh Nabil, who was driving the bus, and Ibrahim Youssef, who was sitting next to him.
“I felt responsible for my passengers, I just had to keep them safe,” Nabil told a contact of the Christian charity Open Doors International two weeks after the incident. “So I drove as fast as I could, but it didn’t stop the terrorists. They managed to break one of the windows with their shooting. Then I sat down on the floor of the bus, but I pressed the accelerator with all the strength I had, trying to escape.”
Panic broke out in the bus. “When the shooting started, all the passengers started screaming,” Youssef said. “I got off my seat and sat down on the floor of the bus to avoid the bullets, and others were doing the same. They were terrible moments. We just screamed and asked God to protect us.”
Then the attackers noticed a minibus from Minya approaching, about 300 metres behind Nabil’s bus, which diverted their attention, allowing Nabil to escape and drive the bus to safety. No-one was killed on Nabil’s bus, although some of the family members sustained serious injuries.
But on the other bus, seven members of one family, including two children, were killed.
Nabil and Youssef said they grieved with the bereaved family and that their escape was a miracle. “God protected us and rescued us from death. I was driving at an excessive speed, while sitting on the floor of the bus, and still the bus stayed steadily on the road,” Nabil said.
When they arrived at the checkpoint at the beginning of the desert road, “there were two buses waiting to go to the monastery from there, but I warned them to go back”, Nabil said.
This time police were manning the checkpoint, unlike in the early morning hours when they had passed the checkpoint, he added.
Continuation
https://www.mojakomunita.sk/en/web/persecutedchristians/other-world/-/blogs/egypt-bus-attack-survivors-ask-%E2%80%98how-could-this-happen-again-
It should have been a joyful day. On Friday 2 November a Coptic family had celebrated the baptisms of two little boys, four-month-old Emile and 5-month-old Noufir, which had taken place in the morning at St Samuel’s monastery. In a cheerful mood, listening to Christian songs in the bus, they started their journey back home. Then, suddenly, guns were fired from a four-wheel drive that had come alongside the bus, carrying four masked men who looked like soldiers.
The 28 family members on board all ducked for cover, including Sameh Nabil, who was driving the bus, and Ibrahim Youssef, who was sitting next to him.
“I felt responsible for my passengers, I just had to keep them safe,” Nabil told a contact of the Christian charity Open Doors International two weeks after the incident. “So I drove as fast as I could, but it didn’t stop the terrorists. They managed to break one of the windows with their shooting. Then I sat down on the floor of the bus, but I pressed the accelerator with all the strength I had, trying to escape.”
Panic broke out in the bus. “When the shooting started, all the passengers started screaming,” Youssef said. “I got off my seat and sat down on the floor of the bus to avoid the bullets, and others were doing the same. They were terrible moments. We just screamed and asked God to protect us.”
Then the attackers noticed a minibus from Minya approaching, about 300 metres behind Nabil’s bus, which diverted their attention, allowing Nabil to escape and drive the bus to safety. No-one was killed on Nabil’s bus, although some of the family members sustained serious injuries.
But on the other bus, seven members of one family, including two children, were killed.
Nabil and Youssef said they grieved with the bereaved family and that their escape was a miracle. “God protected us and rescued us from death. I was driving at an excessive speed, while sitting on the floor of the bus, and still the bus stayed steadily on the road,” Nabil said.
When they arrived at the checkpoint at the beginning of the desert road, “there were two buses waiting to go to the monastery from there, but I warned them to go back”, Nabil said.
This time police were manning the checkpoint, unlike in the early morning hours when they had passed the checkpoint, he added.
Continuation
https://www.mojakomunita.sk/en/web/persecutedchristians/other-world/-/blogs/egypt-bus-attack-survivors-ask-%E2%80%98how-could-this-happen-again-
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