A
gunman opened fire on a church south of Cairo on Friday, killing at
least nine people in the latest apparent jihadist attack on the
country's Christian minority.
Health
ministry spokesman Khaled Megahed told state television that the gunman
was shot dead after killing nine people and wounding others, including a
police officer.
JIHADIST
But
the interior ministry said in a statement that the assailant, a wanted
jihadist implicated in attacks on police, had been wounded and arrested.
The
jihadist had been armed with an assault rifle, 150 bullets and a bomb
he intended to set off at the church, the ministry said.
The ministry said he killed two people when he
opened fire on a store before heading to the church where he shot dead
seven people including an officer.
Mobile
phone footage posted on social media appeared to show the bearded
gunman wearing a bulky ammunition vest sprawled on a street, barely
conscious, as people restrained his arms and then handcuffed him.
Police later cordoned off the crime scene as onlookers crowded around the church, while a forensics team combed the area.
Congealing blood could be seen at a guard post in front of the church.
ATTACKS ON CHRISTIANS
The
Islamic State group's affiliate in Egypt has killed dozens of
Christians in church bombings and shootings over the past year, and has
threatened further attacks against the minority.
Friday's attack came ahead of Christmas for the Copts, who celebrate it on January 7.
Egypt's
Coptic Christians make up about 10 per cent of the country's 93 million
people, and are the largest religious minority in the region.
IS
claimed a suicide bombing of a Cairo church in December 2016 followed
by bombings of two churches north of the capital in April.
A month later, IS gunmen shot dead about 30 Christians south of Cairo as they travelled to a monastery.
MASSACRE
The
jihadists are believed to have also carried out a massacre of Muslim
worshippers in Sinai last month, killing more than 300 in an attack on a
mosque associated with the mystical Sufi strand of Islam which IS views
as heretical.
Egypt imposed a state
of emergency following the church attacks and shootings, and President
Abdel Fattah al-Sisi demanded the army confront the jihadists with
"brutal force" following the mosque massacre.
The
presidency said in a statement on Friday's church attack that it would
increase the "resolve to continue the path of cleansing the country of
terrorism and extremism."
IS has been
waging a deadly insurgency based in the Sinai Peninsula bordering
Israel and the Gaza Strip that has killed hundreds of policemen and
soldiers.
The jihadists have increasingly targeted civilians as attacks on the security forces have become more difficult.
The
army has poured in thousands of troops backed with armour and jets in a
bid to crush the Sinai-based jihadists, but attacks have continued.
BOMB
The attack on the church came a day after six Egyptian soldiers were killed in a roadside bombing in the Sinai.
Last
week, IS claimed responsibility for firing an anti-tank missile at a
helicopter in a North Sinai airport as the defence and interior
ministers were visiting.
The attack killed an aide to the defence minister and a helicopter pilot, but both ministers returned to Cairo unscathed.
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