Egyptian prosecutors on Tuesday ordered DNA tests to be carried out
to identify the victims of the mistaken attack by the army on a Mexican
tourist convoy two days earlier, state-run newspaper al-Ahram reported.
The
tests were necessary as no identification documents were found at the
site of the attack in the country's western desert, the report said.
Pictures from the scene showed the charred vehicles.
Mexican
Foreign Minister Claudia Ruiz Massieu was meanwhile expected in Cairo to
meet survivors of the incident, in which up to eight Mexican tourists
as well as four Egyptians were killed.
Speaking to the press prior
to departing Mexico, Ruiz Massieu said she would hold talks with senior
Egyptian officials "to obtain at first hand information that will allow
us to clarify the circumstances of this appalling incident".
At least six Mexican survivors of the attack are receiving treatment in a hospital on the outskirts of Cairo.
Staff
at the Dar al-Fouad hospital refused to make any statements, saying
they were under strict instructions to provide information only to the
Health Ministry and the Mexican embassy.
Egyptian officials have
been tight-lipped about the incident, and staff in the tourist industry
are also reluctant to discuss the background to it.
Tourism
Ministry spokeswoman Rasha El Azayzy on Monday told dpa that the convoy
had left the road between Cairo and the Bahareyya oasis and entered a
prohibited area in the desert while military operations against
militants were taking place nearby.
According to Mexican authorities, they were then hit in an airstrike.
A
tour guide who had assisted the group as they departed from Cairo, and
whose uncle, also a guide, was killed in the incident, told Egypt's
CBC television that the off-road spot where the incident took place was
not a forbidden area.
The Eygptian Interior Ministry could not be
reached on Monday or Tuesday for comment as to why a tourist police
agent accompanying the group, and police checkpoints along their route,
had allowed them to proceed along the Bahareyya road while military
operations were taking place nearby. El Azayzy said the issue was under
investigation.
Tuesday, September 15, 2015
DNA tests needed to ID tourists killed by Egypt army
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