Islamic State sympathizers
circulated an image Wednesday that appears to show the grisly aftermath
of the beheading of a Croatian hostage abducted in Egypt, which if
confirmed would mark the first
such killing of a foreign captive in the
country since the extremist group established a branch here last year.The photo carried a caption in Arabic that said Salopek was killed "for his country's participation in the war against the Islamic State," and after a deadline had passed for the Egyptian government to meet his captors' demands.
The picture
also contained an inset of two Egyptian newspaper reports, with one
headline declaring Croatia's support for Egypt in its war against
terrorism and another saying Croatia reiterated its support for the
Kurds, who have been battling the IS group in Syria and Iraq. Croatian
troops fought in the U.S.-led coalition in Iraq and still serve in the
NATO-led force in Afghanistan.
In
a televised address to the nation, Croatian Prime Minister Zoran
Milanovic said authorities there could not confirm the killing with
certainty.
"We cannot 100 percent confirm
it is true, but what we see looks horrific. A confirmation may not come
for several days," he said, appealing for calm and adding that officials
will not stop searching for Salopek as long as there is any hope.
The Egyptian Foreign Ministry had no immediate comment.
Al-Azhar,
the Sunni Muslim world's prestigious religious institute, condemned the
apparent killing, calling it a "demonic act of which all religions and
human traditions are innocent." The statement also said Islamic law
stipulates that it is forbidden to shed the blood of foreigners.
Exiled
members of the Muslim Brotherhood group, branded a terrorist
organization by authorities, said the beheading was a sign that the
government had failed to curb the rise of extremism in the country.
The
Associated Press could not independently verify the image. However, it
bore markings consistent with a filmed hostage demand released last week
by the group, which calls itself the Sinai Province of the Islamic
State. It was not clear where the video was shot.
In that video, the IS affiliate
set an Aug. 7 deadline for Egyptian authorities to free "Muslim women," a
term referring to female Islamist prisoners detained in a sweeping
government crackdown following the 2013 military ouster of the country's
Islamist president.
The
extremists' videotaped demand was entitled "A Message to the Egyptian
Government," and was shot in the style of previous IS propaganda videos.
It came just a day before el-Sissi hosted a much-hyped ceremony with
foreign dignitaries to mark the opening of a new section of the Suez
Canal.
As the deadline
expired Friday, an Egyptian security official said that security forces
were searching for Salopek across the country, focusing on the western
provinces of Matrouh and Wadi Gedid, which border Libya, as well as
Beheira in the Nile Delta and Giza, part of greater Cairo.
Speaking
on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to talk to
journalists, the official said Salopek's driver, left behind by the
kidnappers, said that the gunmen who seized the Croat on a highway just
west of Cairo had Bedouin accents.
That
suggests they could have come from a variety of isolated places in
Egypt, including the restive northern Sinai Peninsula, where Egypt's
Islamic State affiliate is based, or the vast Western Desert, which is a
gateway to volatile and lawless Libya, home to its own Islamic State
branch.
The sister of a woman jailed on
charges of belonging to the Brotherhood, Esraa el-Taweel, who had
previously pleaded for Salopek's life to be spared, said she spoke about
the matter during a recent prison visit.
"She
rejected that the life of an innocent man who is not responsible for
other detainees be negotiated," said Doaa el-Taweel, who asserts that
her sister is innocent. "She rejected the whole thing."
Salopek,
a surveyor working with France's CGG Ardiseis, was abducted on July 22.
The company has an office in the leafy southern suburb of Maadi, where
many expats and diplomats live.
Last
week, Croatian Foreign Minister Vesna Pusic met with her Egyptian
counterpart in Cairo to press for Salopek's release, while Egyptian
Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry's office pledged in statement that Egypt
would " spare no effort" in the search for him.
The Islamic State
group holds about a third of Iraq and neighboring Syria in its
self-declared "caliphate." In Syria, IS militants have killed foreign
journalists and aid workers, starting with American journalist James
Foley in August last year, and released grisly videos of the beheadings.Foley's taped beheading was followed by the killing of American-Israeli journalist Steven Sotloff, British aid workers David Haines and Alan Henning, American aid worker Peter Kassig, as well as Japanese nationals Haruna Yukawa and Kenji Goto.
In
Libya, an IS affiliate released a video in February showing its
fighters beheading a group of Coptic Christians from Egypt. In April,
another video showed them beheading and shooting dead groups of
Ethiopian Christians.
Egypt
has seen an increase in violence since the ouster of Islamist President
Mohammed Morsi, with attacks by suspected Islamic extremists in both the
Sinai Peninsula and the mainland focusing primarily on security forces.
Militants
have also targeted foreign interests, including the Italian Consulate,
which was hit with a car bomb last month. That came just days after
another bomb killed Prosecutor General Hisham Barakat in an upscale
Cairo neighborhood.
But this would be the first time the local
Islamic State affiliate has captured and then killed a foreigner in
Egypt, a major escalation as the country tries to rebuild its crucial
tourism industry after years of unrest following the 2011 revolt that
toppled autocrat Hosni Mubarak.
Last
December, the affiliate claimed responsibility for the killing of an
American oil worker with Texas-based energy company Apache Corp. Apache
had said that previous August that one of its supervisors had been
killed in an apparent carjacking in the Western Desert.
Source: AP
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