ATENTADOS JIHHADISTAS POR EL MUNDO

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Cuando ocurre la desgracia en Europa o en el EEUU durante días tenemos las portadas dedicadas al atentado, su perpetrador, las víctimas, las consecuencias socio-políticas, etc, etc, etc...
Cuando ocurre en otra parte del mundo, con suerte vemos la noticia arrinconada allí, entre la previsión del tiempo y la receta del día.
Así parece que las víctimas del jihaddismo islámico somos solo los europeos/americanos, que los terroristas wahabi atacan sólo a cristianos.
Y no es así. Ni de lejos.

Este es un tema para, por lo menos, hacer algo de "recuento" de las víctimas del fundamentalismo islámico por el mundo. Algunos se van a sorprender como las víctimas más numerosas del jihhad/fundamentalismo/terorismo islámico son en realidad los demás musulmanes, los que no comparten las ideologías sectarias del terrorismo saudí ®.
 
Última edición:
un pequeño resumen de los atentados jihadistas - wahabistas (ISIS, Boco-Haram, Al- Shaabab & afiliados) de lo que va del año 2017.
en rojo señalo los atentados igual o más mortales que el atentado en Manchester de este lunes pasado:


Jan. 1, 2017

Reina Nightclub in Istanbul, Turkey was attacked by a gunman, leaving 39 people dead. Suspect Abdulgadir Masharipov from Uzbekistan confessed to the attack, according to CNN. The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for the attack. The nightclub has since been demolished.

Jan. 2, 2017

A car bomb attack in Sadr City, Iraq left at least 32 people dead. A suicide bomber blew up a vehicle within a busy market. The attack was claimed by the Islamic State group through an online statement, according to The Daily Mail.

In Mogadishu, Somalia a group of suicide bombers attacked a checkpoint outside the African Union AMISOM, a peacekeeping task force. Al-Shabaab claimed responsibility for the attack, according to Reuters.

Men wearing suicide vests and armed with guns attacked police stations in Samarra, Iraq. At least seven police officers were killed, according to Reuters.

Jan. 3, 2017

A Taliban ambush in northeastern Badakhshan province killed at least four police, according to The Associated Press.

Jan. 4, 2017

Two United Nations peacekeepers were killed during a mission in the Central African Republic, according to the United Nations News Centre. According to the report, the convoy they were traveling in was attacked. No terror group has officially been linked to the attack.

Jan. 5, 2017

At least 17 people were killed by a car bomb in Baghdad, Iraq, according to Al Jazeera. The report said two car bombs were used at the local al Obeidi area food market, and the Islamic State of Iraq claimed responsibility.

In Jableh, Syria at least 11 civilians were killed in an explosion near the municipal stadium, according to reports from the BBC.No terrorist group has stepped forward to claim the attack.

Two people were killed in Izmir, Turkey. Police stopped a car at a checkpoint near the courthouse, leading to a clash between the attackers and security, and a car bomb was detonated, according to CNN. No terror organization claimed the attack.

Jan. 7, 2017

At least 48 people were killed while dozens were wounded in a car bomb attack at a marketplace in Azaz, according to The Daily Mail.

Jan. 8, 2017

At least 20 were killed while another 50 were wounded in two suicide bombings in Baghdad, according to Al Jazeera.

Jan. 10, 2017

At least 38 were killed while another 43 were injured in a car bomb that blew up in Kabul; the Taliban claimed responsibility for the attacks, according to The Chicago Tribune.

Jan. 17, 2017

Ten people were killed and 30 others were injured in a suicide attack in Peshawar, Pakistan, according to the BBC.

Jan. 18, 2017

Five suicide bombers attacked a NATO army base, killing 60 people and injuring 115 in Gao, Mali, according to The New York Times.

Jan. 20, 2017

At least 25 people were killed after a bomb was placed on a vegetable crate and exploded in Parachinar in Pakistan, according to Radio Pakistan.

Jan. 25, 2017

At least 28 people were killed and another 43 were injured after an attack on Dayah Hotel in Mogadishu, according to Al Jazeera.

Jan. 27, 2017

At least nine Kenyan soldiers and 70 insurgents died in a battle in Kulbiyow, Somalia, according to Al Jazeera.

Feb. 7, 2017

At least 15 people were executed by the Islamic State group in a village north of Mosul, according to Iraqi News.

At least 22 people were killed in a suicide attack outside the Afghanistan Supreme Court in Kabul, according to Reuters. The report stated that the Islamic State group claimed responsibility for the attack.

Feb. 10, 2017

A car bomb explosion in Baghdad, Iraq killed at least 10 people and wounded 33 others, according to Reuters. The report states the Islamic State Group claimed responsibility for the attack.

Feb. 11, 2017

At least 20 people were killed in a suicide car bombing in Helmand Province, according to The Washington Post.

Feb. 12, 2017

At least 15 civilians were burned to death for trying to escape an area under control of the Islamic State group, according to Iraqi News.

Feb. 13, 2017

At least 13 people were killed and roughly 83 others injured after a bomb exploded outside the Punjab provincial assembly building in Lahore, Pakistan, according to Reuters. Jamaat-ur-Ahrar, a faction group of the Pakistani Taliban, claimed responsibility for the attack, the report said.

Feb. 15, 2017

A suicide bomber detonated a pickup truck laced with explosives in northern Baghdad, Iraq, killing at least nine people, according to Al Jazeera. No group has officially claimed the attack.

Feb. 16, 2017

At least 59 people were killed in a car bomb explosion at a car dealership in southern Baghdad, according to The Chicago Tribune.

At least 75 people were killed in a suicide bombing at the Lal Shahbaz Qalandar shrine in Sindh province, Pakistan, according to CNN.

Feb. 19, 2017

At least 39 people were killed in a car bomb explosion in Mogadishu, Somalia, according to Al Jazeera.

Feb. 24, 2017

Two suicide car bombs detonated and killed at least 53 people in Al-Bab, Syria, reports Al Jazeera.

Feb. 25, 2017

At least 10 police officers were killed at a mosque in the Darzab district of Afghanistan, according to Al Jazeera. The report also said that the Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack.

Feb. 26, 2017

Journalist for Rudaw Media Shifa Gardi was killed along with a military commander in Mosul, according to United Press International.

March 1, 2017

At least 23 people were killed and another 106 injured in two bombings on a police station in Kabul, Afghanistan, according to The New York Times.

March 8, 2017

Yet another major attack seven days later in Kabul as a team of gunmen shot at a military hospital, killing at least 30 people and injuring 63, according to CNN.

March 9, 2017

At least 20 were killed with another 26 injured in a suicide bomb at a wedding in Tikrit, Iraq, according to Reuters.

March 11, 2017

At least 40 were killed in a double bombing in Damascus with another 100 injured near Shiite shrines and a cemetery, according to The New York Times.

March 15, 2017

A suicide bomber detonated his vest at a historical judicial building in Damascus killing at least 30 people, according to The New York Times.

March 20, 2017

At least 23 were killed in a car bombing in Baghdad, Iraq. ISIS claimed credit for it. Forty others were injured, according to Reuters.

March 22, 2017

A car crashed into pedestrians, killing five and injuring 49 in London at the Westminster Bridge, according to The Associated Press.

March 25, 2017

One black male was killed by a white supremacist after being stabbed in New York, according to The Chicago Tribune.

March 31, 2017

At least 22 people died while another 90 were injured in a bomb blast in Parachinar, Pakistan. The attack was claimed by Jamaat-ul Ahrar, a faction of the Pakistani Taliban, according to The New York Times.

April 3, 2017

At least 15 were killed and 64 injured in a suicide bomb at the St. Petersburg Metro station. Imam Shamil Battalion claimed responsibility, according to CNN.

April 5, 2017

Tikrit was the scene of another attack where 31 people were killed and 40 were injured. ISIS claimed responsibility, according to Reuters.

April 9, 2017

A pair of church bombings saw 28 people killed in Tanta, Egypt and another 17 people killed in Alexandria, Egypt, according to CNN.

May 3, 2017

At least eight people were killed when a NATO convoy was attacked by a suicide car bombing in Kabul, according to Reuters. The report also stated that the Islamic State group claimed responsibility for the attack.

May 5, 2017

Two female suicide bombers killed at least five people in northeast Nigeria, according to the Stars and Stripes. No group has claimed the attack.

May 8, 2017

A suicide car bomb killed at least eight people near a cafe in Mogadishu, Somalia, according to Reuters. The report also stated that Islamic militant group al-Shabaab claimed responsibility for the attack.

May 9, 2017

The Islamic State group reportedly killed at least 47 of its prisoners in Kirkuk's Hawija, according to Iraqi News. (WARNING: Link contains graphic content.)

May 12, 2017

A suicide bomber wearing an explosive vest killed at least 25 people in Mastung, Pakistan, according to Reuters. The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for the bombing.

May 15, 2017

At least six farmers were killed by gunmen while tending their land in Maiduguri, Nigeria, according to Al Jazeera. The report states the Nigerian government and military believe Boko Haram was behind the attack.

May 18, 2017

At least 52 people were killed in Hama, Syria, according to Time. The report also claims that residents were targeted for belonging to the “Ismaili branch of Shiite Islam.” The Islamic State group was thought to be behind the attack.

May 20, 2017

Several car bombs killed at least 33 people in Baghdad, Afghanistan, according to Al Jazzera.

May 21, 2017

Al least five people were killed by a suicide bomber attack in Idlib province, Syria, according to the Stars and Stripes.

May 22, 2017

At least 22 people were killed at an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester, United Kingdom. The Islamic State group claimed responsibility.

May 23, 2017

In Kandahar province, Afghanistan, eight soldiers were killed in a military base attack, according to the Stars and Stripes. The Taliban has claimed responsibility for the attack.


http://cbs12.com/news/nation-world/timeline-of-terror-in-2017
 
Fresco-fresquito de hoy: ISIS cortando cabezas en las Filipinas...el país en el cual desde hace algún tiempo el Presidente Duterte está despotricando del todo políticamente incorrecto sobre "las 1001 maravillas" :wtf: (ironía on) de las políticas US&OTAN, dice a la EU "F*CK" y está determinado de sacar la presencia militar americana del territorio del país, acercándose a Rusia de Putin

...pues parece ser, que el escuadrón punitivo del matón del City&El Gran Dinero, pretendientes, estos últimos para la corona de Imperadores del mundo en el s.XXI, los ahijados de Arabia Saudí, los cortabacezas del ISIS han abierto el frente contra el enésimo enemigo de la élite/mafia del Occidente:

Islamic State-linked militants besiege Philippine city


ILIGAN CITY, Philippines (AP) — Islamic State group-linked militants swept through a southern Philippine city, beheading a police chief, burning buildings, seizing a Catholic priest and his worshippers and raising the black flag of IS, authorities said Wednesday. President Rodrigo Duterte, who had declared martial law across the southern third of the nation, warned he may expand it nationwide.

At least 21 people have died in the fighting, officials said.

http://www.sfgate.com/news/world/ar...ch-says-priest-churchgoers-taken-11169044.php

----
a ver cuantas velitas se van a encender hoy para las 21 víctimas del terrorismo islámico en Filipinas de hoy, en el Occidente, la única patria de los valores humanitarios :wacky::blackeye::blackeye::blackeye:...supongo tendré que esperar sentada....
 
Gracias @el porqué de las cosas por este tema.

Justo cuatro días antes de lo de Manchester...
syrian-president-bashar-assad.jpg

Syrian President Bashar Assad, right, speaks with Iraq's National Security Adviser Faleh al-Fayadth, in Damascus, Syria, Thursday, May. 18, 2017. (SANA via AP) SANA—AP
Syria
ISIS Kills at Least 52 People in Syria Attacks
Bassem Mroue / AP
May 18, 2017
(BEIRUT) — The Islamic State group attacked several government-held villages in central Syria on Thursday, capturing at least one of them in violence that left 52 people dead including more than two dozen women and children, some of whom were beheaded, as well as Syrian troops, state media, medical officials and an opposition monitoring group said.

The attack in the central Hama province targeted villages where most residents belong to the Ismaili branch of Shiite Islam, raising fears the extremists might massacre them, as they have in other minority communities in Syria and Iraq.

The villages are located near the town of Salamiyeh and the highway that links the capital, Damascus, to the northern city of Aleppo, but state media said traffic was not affected.

The attacks come as government forces are on the offensive against the extremists in other parts of Syria, mostly in the northern province of Aleppo and the central Homs region and to the east. U.S.-backed and Kurdish-led forces are meanwhile marching toward the extremists' de-facto capital of Raqqa, in northern Syria.

State news agency SANA said militants were able to storm homes in the southern part of the Aqareb al-Safi village, adding that government forces repelled them, pushing them back toward the desert.

The head of the National Hospital in Salamiyeh, Dr. Noufal Safar, said the hospital received 52 bodies, including 11 women and 17 children. He said some of them were beheaded and others had their limbs amputated.

"They were brought with all forms of deformations but most of them appear to have died as a result of gunfire," Safar told The Associated Press by telephone. He added that most of the dead and wounded were brought by ambulances.

Safar quoted some of the wounded people as saying the extremists began storming homes and beheading women inside.

Rami Razzouk, a coroner at the hospital who inspected the bodies, said the children brought in were mostly dismembered, while most of the men died from shelling or heavy machine gun fire.

He said at least nine children were beaten with heavy objects such as bricks or stones on their heads or necks. Razzouk said there were "a couple of children whose heads were fully dismembered because of the beating."

Two of the children "had most of their limbs removed so they had to be carried in blankets" and two men were shot in the eye, he said. He said 120 people were wounded.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights also said that 52 people were killed in the fighting, with the dead including 15 civilians, 27 Syrian soldiers and 10 unidentified people.

SANA said 40 people were wounded.

The IS-linked Aamaq news agency said the group captured Aqareb al-Safi and Mabouja. It identified residents as members of President Bashar Assad's Alawite sect, an off-shoot of Shiite Islam. The Sunni extremists view Shiites as apostates deserving of death. IS has massacred thousands of Shiites and other opponents in Syria and Iraq, often boasting about the killings and circulating photos and videos of them online.

Aamaq claimed that 100 Syrian troops and pro-government gunmen were killed in the fighting.

"Dozens of people are missing but it is not clear if they were kidnapped by Daesh," said the Observatory's chief Rami Abdurrahman, using an Arabic acronym to refer to the group. He said IS deployed snipers on roofs of some buildings in Aqareb al-Safi.

State TV said two people were wounded in IS shelling in Salamiyeh.

Also on Thursday, SANA reported that Assad met with Iraq's national security adviser Faleh al-Fayad to discuss steps to improve coordination between their countries' militaries in the anti-terrorism campaign along their shared border.
 
hoy, a 4 días del atentado en Manchester, en el cual murieron 22 personas, a la primera página de los periódicos salta la enésima masacre contra los cristianos cortos en Egipto:

Hombres armados disparan contra varios autobuses llenos de cristianos y matan a al menos 24 en Egipto

http://www.abc.es/internacional/abc...s-cristianos-egipto-201705261212_noticia.html

no es ni el primero, ni por desgracia será el último de tales horribles características.
la pregunta es ¿por qué normalmente esas noticias están enterradas cerca de la sección culinarias del periódico el que sea o ni siquiera se da a conocer y precisamente hoy, con la matanza de Manchester se saca en primera línea?
la respuesta está más que clara, basta ver los comentarios: "los musulmanes son el diablo, nos van a matar a todos los cristianos!"...¡estupendo Mr.Deep State!, haciendo el trabajo preparatorio para el Choque entre Civilizaciones ;)

detalles como que:

- los matones tenían el rostro cubierto - o sea, puede haber sido cualquiera, hasta los marines US, por decir ;)
- "De momento, ningún grupo terrorista de la pequeña miríada que pululan por el país ha reclamado la autoría del atentado."
- las comunidades copta & musulmana llevan más de 14 siglos cohabitando Egipto y siguen allí, hasta que los matones a pago del wahabista Arabia Saudí empezo operación "petro-dolar para terrorismo islámico"......

...completamente pasados por alto...de eso el buen perioListo que ha sacado su artículo en la portada ni se ha acordado...¡qué cosas, qué cosas!, ¿verdad? ;)

lo dicho: alegremente rumbo al ingenierizado "Choque entre civilizaciones" (y):sneaky:
 
Gracias @el porqué de las cosas por este tema.

Justo cuatro días antes de lo de Manchester...
syrian-president-bashar-assad.jpg

Syrian President Bashar Assad, right, speaks with Iraq's National Security Adviser Faleh al-Fayadth, in Damascus, Syria, Thursday, May. 18, 2017. (SANA via AP) SANA—AP
Syria
ISIS Kills at Least 52 People in Syria Attacks
Bassem Mroue / AP
May 18, 2017
(BEIRUT) — The Islamic State group attacked several government-held villages in central Syria on Thursday, capturing at least one of them in violence that left 52 people dead including more than two dozen women and children, some of whom were beheaded, as well as Syrian troops, state media, medical officials and an opposition monitoring group said.

The attack in the central Hama province targeted villages where most residents belong to the Ismaili branch of Shiite Islam, raising fears the extremists might massacre them, as they have in other minority communities in Syria and Iraq.

The villages are located near the town of Salamiyeh and the highway that links the capital, Damascus, to the northern city of Aleppo, but state media said traffic was not affected.

The attacks come as government forces are on the offensive against the extremists in other parts of Syria, mostly in the northern province of Aleppo and the central Homs region and to the east. U.S.-backed and Kurdish-led forces are meanwhile marching toward the extremists' de-facto capital of Raqqa, in northern Syria.

State news agency SANA said militants were able to storm homes in the southern part of the Aqareb al-Safi village, adding that government forces repelled them, pushing them back toward the desert.

The head of the National Hospital in Salamiyeh, Dr. Noufal Safar, said the hospital received 52 bodies, including 11 women and 17 children. He said some of them were beheaded and others had their limbs amputated.

"They were brought with all forms of deformations but most of them appear to have died as a result of gunfire," Safar told The Associated Press by telephone. He added that most of the dead and wounded were brought by ambulances.

Safar quoted some of the wounded people as saying the extremists began storming homes and beheading women inside.

Rami Razzouk, a coroner at the hospital who inspected the bodies, said the children brought in were mostly dismembered, while most of the men died from shelling or heavy machine gun fire.

He said at least nine children were beaten with heavy objects such as bricks or stones on their heads or necks. Razzouk said there were "a couple of children whose heads were fully dismembered because of the beating."

Two of the children "had most of their limbs removed so they had to be carried in blankets" and two men were shot in the eye, he said. He said 120 people were wounded.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights also said that 52 people were killed in the fighting, with the dead including 15 civilians, 27 Syrian soldiers and 10 unidentified people.

SANA said 40 people were wounded.

The IS-linked Aamaq news agency said the group captured Aqareb al-Safi and Mabouja. It identified residents as members of President Bashar Assad's Alawite sect, an off-shoot of Shiite Islam. The Sunni extremists view Shiites as apostates deserving of death. IS has massacred thousands of Shiites and other opponents in Syria and Iraq, often boasting about the killings and circulating photos and videos of them online.

Aamaq claimed that 100 Syrian troops and pro-government gunmen were killed in the fighting.

"Dozens of people are missing but it is not clear if they were kidnapped by Daesh," said the Observatory's chief Rami Abdurrahman, using an Arabic acronym to refer to the group. He said IS deployed snipers on roofs of some buildings in Aqareb al-Safi.

State TV said two people were wounded in IS shelling in Salamiyeh.

Also on Thursday, SANA reported that Assad met with Iraq's national security adviser Faleh al-Fayad to discuss steps to improve coordination between their countries' militaries in the anti-terrorism campaign along their shared border.
gracias, LeMiroir.

pero eso no hace noticia para las portada de los periódicos ;): las victimas del fundamentalismo islámico NO SON cristianos, sino musulmanes...con lo cual ni son víctimas, ni los fundamentalistas islámicos son tan terroristas ;)

repite conmigo: "Islam = terror = nos quiere matar a todos los cristianos", "Islam = terror = nos quiere matar a todos los cristianos", "Islam = terror = nos quiere matar a todos los cristianos"

...como cualquier mantra surgirá el efecto deseado, seguro ;)...:cry::cry:

:vomit::vomit::vomit:

y cuando el día de mañana se liará parda, con los musulmanes, sí que será mea culpa de todos los que no se han dado cuenta de la monstruosa manipulación de agentes-provocadores en connivencia con poderes centrales cuyo objetivo es una destrucción absoluta...objetivo Order out of Caos ;)

y luego dicen que lo de Albert Pike es conspiración...yo lo veo más como hoja de ruta que como otra cosa...seguido a pié de la letra, sin duda alguna. (n)(n)(n)
 
Atentado Egipto
Al menos 28 muertos y 23 heridos en un atentado contra cristianos coptos en Egipto

14958178965317.jpg

Imagen del autobús que ha sido atacado esta mañana en Egipto.

La fe perseguida de los hijos de los faraones

El IS atenta contra dos iglesias en Egipto el Domingo de Ramos

Cristianos en Egipto, entre la espada del Estado Islámico y el abandono

La mayoría de las víctimas son niños, según los testigos. Los hombres armados que han atacado los autobuses estaban ocultos en una colina

Al menos 28 personas han muerto y otras 23 han resultado heridas en un nuevo ataque de un grupo de hombres armados contra un autobús de cristianos coptosen un pueblo de la provincia rural de Minya, a unos 350 kilómetros al sur de El Cairo.

Así lo ha indicado la autoridad de ambulancias de la provincia, una zona con un gran número de fieles de la Iglesia Ortodoxa Copta, que profesa alrededor del 8% de los 92 millones de egipcios. El atentado se ha producido en la localidad de Al Adua, a unos 80 kilómetros al norte de Minya, la capital de la provincia.

Según los primeros testimonios citados por la prensa local, se trataría de una emboscada. Los hombres armados se hallaban ocultos en una colina cercana y, al percatarse de la llegada de un grupo de autobuses, han abierto fuego a los peregrinos. La caravana ha sido entonces blanco de un intenso tiroteo. Los heridos han sido trasladados a un hospital cercano. Los atacantes eran entre 8 y 10 hombres vestidos en uniformes militares.

Testigos han relatado a EL MUNDO que la mayoría de las víctimas son niños. El presidente egipcio Abdelfatah al Sisi ha convocado una reunión de urgencia de los responsables de seguridad. En un comunicado, Al Sisi ha dado orden de que se adopten todas las medidas necesarias para asistir a los heridos y arrestar a los asaltantes. Las fuerzas del orden rastrean la zona en busca de los responsables del baño de sangre.

En un comunicado, el ministerio del Interior ha detallado que "asaltantes desconocidos" a bordo de tres todoterrenos han comenzado a "disparar aleatoriamente" contra el convoy. La zona ha sido acordonada mientras continua la búsqueda. El gran jeque de Al Azhar Ahmed el Tayeb ha condenado el atentado desde Berlín, donde se encuentra de viaje.

visita del Papa Bergoglio, a principios de este mes, la sucursal local del IS (Estado Islámico, por sus siglas en inglés) llamó a incrementar los ataques contra la minoría cristiana egipcia aprovechando sus reuniones. De momento, el ataque de este viernes no ha sido reivindicado por ningún grupo.

Según las primeras informaciones, las víctimas se dirigían en el autobús hacia el monasterio de San Samuel, ubicado en la misma provincia. El convento se alza en las montañas de Qalamun en la zona en la que San Samuel, un santo copto célebre por haber padecido las torturas de los bizantinos y haber sido testigo de la invasión árabe de Egipto, dirigió a una comunidad de 120 monjes durante el siglo VII d.C.. El recinto -que alberga cinco iglesias y zonas ajardinadas- fue reconstruido el siglo pasado y es un lugar que los cristianos suelen visitar durante los días festivos..

Esta nueva matanza contra la comunidad cristiana en la provincia egipcia con mayor número de fieles -escenario, además, de esporádicos conflictos sectarios- se registra un mes después de la visita del Papa Francisco a El Cairo.

Durante su breve pero histórico periplo, el pontífice argentino abogó por el diálogo interreligioso con Al Azhar, la institución más prestigiosa del islam suní, y llamó a resistir a los coptos. "La sangre inocente de fieles indefensos -dijo- ha sido derramada cruelmente: su sangre inocente nos une". "Cuantos martires en esta tierra, desde los primeros siglos del Cristianismo, han vivido la fe de manera heroica y hasta el final, prefiriendo derramar su sangre antes que renegar del Senor y ceder a las lisonjas del mal o a la tentacion de responder al mal con el mal".

Hace apenas mes y medio después de un doble atentado contra sendas iglesias del norte del país. El pasado 9 de abril, coincidiendo con la celebración del domingo de Ramos, los ataques segaron 46 vidas e hirieron a 120 personas. Los atentados fueron reivindicados por la sucursal local del autodenominado Estado Islámico.

Ambos resultaron obra de sendos kamikazes que sembraron de dolor el inicio de la Semana Santa. El primer ataque se produjo en el interior de la Iglesia de San Jorge, en el centro de Tanta, una de las principales ciudades del delta del Nilo. El agresor saltó por los aires en plena misa cobrándose 28 vidas. Tres horas después del primer ataque, otro "kamikaze" dejó otros 18 muertos a las puertas de la iglesia de San Marcos, en un céntrico barrio de la mediterránea Alejandría.

Como respuesta a las arremetidas, el régimen egipcio encargó a las fuerzas armadas la tarea de ayudar a la policía en la protección de las instalaciones vitales de todo el país y decretó el Estado de emergencia por un periodo de tres meses.

La medida fue aprobada después por el consejo de ministros y el Parlamento. La ley de emergencia concede al presidente poderes amplios y excepcionales para establecer tribunales especiales; enviar civiles a la corte; interceptar comunicaciones, imponer la censura previa o decretar el toque de queda. La norma blinda, además, la actuación de las fuerzas armadas.



 
Aviones egipcios bombardean en Libia en respuesta al atentado contra cristianos coptos

Las fuerzas aéreas egipcias destruyeron "por completo" el centro principal de los grupos islamistas Majlis al Shura y Muyahidín de Derna. El presidente egipcio ha responsabilizado al Estados Islámico de la matanza.

481315-620-282.jpg

Familiares lloran durante el funeral de las víctimas del atentado contra cristianos coptos en Egipto. (Mohamed Hossam / EFE)

http://www.20minutos.es/noticia/304...s-libia-respuesta-atentado-cristianos-coptos/
 
Hoy: más de 90 muertos y 300 heridos en un ataque suicida en Kabul, Afganistán, en el barrio diplomático, uno de los más seguros de la ciudad.
Se ha utilizado un camión lleno de explosivos. Se ha perseguido causar más muertos&heridos posibles, por razona y el horario.

Los talibanes han dicho que no tienen nada que ver.

A la espera de la confirmación de autoría de ISIS, que durante los últimos meses hicieron varios ataques terroristas mortales en la capital afgana.

Kabul bombing: Huge explosion rocks diplomatic district
Dozens of Afghan civilians killed after massive explosion rips through the heart of the capital's diplomatic district.

  • READ MORE: Social media users react to 'horrific' Kabul bombing

    Police and health officials confirmed to Al Jazeera that at least 80 people were killed and more than 300 wounded in the attack. The death toll was expected to rise.

    The victims appear mainly to have been Afghan civilians and there were no immediate reports of casualties among foreign embassy staff.

    "The area is heavily guarded and there is usually traffic jam, just because of security-controlled points in the area," Mushtaq Rahim, an independent analyst and security commentator, told Al Jazeera from Kabul.

    "And that was one of the main reasons that we had so many civilian casualties. because of the congestion that happens in that area."

    Video shot at the scene showed burning debris, crumbled walls and buildings and destroyed cars, many with dead or wounded people inside."...

    Al Jazeera's Qais Azimy, reporting from Kabul, said the location of the attack was very significant, as it hit one of the Afghan capital's busiest and most secure parts.

    "Kabul has been very quiet for the past week but police has confirmed to us that this was one of the biggest blasts Kabul has ever seen," he said.

    Azimy said police were investigating the possibility that the attacker had detonated a truck packed with explosives.

    "If that is true, if a truck full of explosives could manage to get to that highly secure part of Kabul, then that is going to raise a lot of questions - not only among those diplomats living in the area, but also Kabul's regular residents."


    http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2017/05/huge-blast-rocks-kabul-diplomatic-area-170531040318591.html

    ...esperando me quedo a ver la campaña mediática y de la consciencia civil occidental de "¡Yo soy Kabul!", las velitas y lacitos negros de solidaridad con las víctimas musulmanas del jihadismo islámico....:rolleyes:...
 
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