Displaying items by tag: Sinai
Egypt: 'Sinai is our Vietnam'
Servicemen in the Sinai peninsula are ill-equipped and under-trained. Since the insurgency began, Egypt's propaganda narrative has portrayed its fighters as religious, disciplined, ‘born to kill’ fighting machines. Men aged 18 to 30 must serve in the military for eighteen months, followed by a nine-year obligation to serve if called for duty. IS militants are trained in guerrilla and desert warfare and house-to-house combat, and have military experience in Gaza, Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya. Egypt’s fighting forces are conscripts with 45 days in boot camp. Moataz, a medic now discharged from military duty, still has nightmares about his service and visits a psychiatrist. He said, ‘Body parts were everywhere in a scene that I will never forget. The rest of the bodies were firstly wounded and then executed by gunfire. Some bodies had more than 20 bullets in their heads. To us and many other conscripts, Sinai was our Vietnam.’
Egypt: terrified Copts flee Sinai
‘Are you a Christian?’ These were the last words 45-year-old Medhat Saad Hakim heard before he was shot in the head on his doorstep last month. The gunmen dragged Hakim's screaming mother outside the house before going back inside and shooting his father dead. The attackers then looted the house before torching it. Medhat Saad and Saad Hakim are the sixth and seventh Christians killed in the town of Al-Arish in a month. All are targeted by Al Wilayat Sinai, a local affiliate of IS waging a low-level insurgency on the peninsula. The two killings, followed by another one 48 hours later, prompted Christians to flee the coastal town; over 500 have arrived in Ismailia, 200 km away, since 21 February. Those who cannot leave have sent their children away to relatives outside Sinai. Terrorists have threatened taxi and minibus drivers with death if they take fleeing Christians from Al-Arish.