Egypt Church curtails Easter celebrations after bombings
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A
general views shows the Monastery of Marmina in the city of Borg
El-Arab, east of Alexandria on April 10, 2017, as mourners attend the
funeral of victims of the blast at the Coptic Christian Saint Mark’s
church in Alexandria the previous day. Egypt prepared to impose a state
of emergency after jihadist bombings killed dozens at two churches in
the deadliest attacks in recent memory on the country’s Coptic Christian
minority. / AFP PHOTO / MOHAMED EL-SHAHED
“Given the current circumstances and our solidarity with the families of the dead, we are going to limit our celebrations to Easter mass,” a statement said.
The traditional handing out of sweets to children by Coptic Pope Tawadros II before the start of Easter mass on Sunday will also be cancelled.
“There will be no decorations in churches and the rooms normally reserved for the reception of worshippers wishing to exchange season’s greetings will remain closed,” an official at the Coptic patriarchate told AFP. The Islamic State jihadist group said it was behind the bombings at churches in the cities of Tanta and Alexandria, and threatened further attacks against Egypt’s Christian minority.
The government ordered a three-month state of emergency which was unanimously approved by parliament on Tuesday.
Sunday’s first bombing at the Mar Girgis church in Tanta, north of Cairo, killed 28 people.
The second struck outside Saint Mark’s church in Alexandria, killing 17 people after a suicide bomber was prevented from entering the building.
Pope Tawadros II had led a Palm Sunday service in the church shortly before.
The violence comes ahead of Catholic Pope Francis’s first visit to Egypt, which a Vatican official said will go ahead as planned on April 28 and 29 despite the attacks.
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