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Libya: Mass grave of Ethiopian Christians killed by IS/Daesh found


image: asenseofbelonging.org

image: asenseofbelonging.org

Source: Fides

Government authorities in Libya have announced the discovery of a mass grave containing the remains of 34 Ethiopian Christians killed in 2015 by jihadists affiliated to the Islamic State (Daesh). The grave, reported by the Department of Criminal Investigation of the Libyan interior ministry, has been identified in an area not far from the coastal town of Sirte, which was was under the control of the jihadist armed groups in 2015. Libyan authorities say the remains of the Christians slaughtered by Daesh will be repatriated to Ethiopia, once national and international legal procedures have been carried out.

In April 2015, a video released by Furqan Media - accredited at that time as the media network of 'Islamic State' - showed two different groups of prisoners presented as Ethiopian Christians who were beheaded and shot in a desert and on a Libyan beach. The video, accompanied by the usual slogans against the 'nation of the cross' included images of the destruction of churches, icons and Christian tombs, addressed to Christians, and repeated that there would be no salvation for them if they did not convert to Islam or did not agree to pay the 'protection fee'.

In the video the victims were presented as belonging to the 'hostile Ethiopian Church'. The massacred Christians were poor Ethiopian immigrants.

The Ethiopian Orthodox Church was legally bound to the Coptic Patriarchate of Alexandria until 1959, when it was recognized as autocephalous Church from the Coptic Patriarch Cyril VI. Copts have been the target of the massacres and attacks by Daesh, also because they identify it as a religious entity close to the political institutions of Egypt led by President Abdel Fattah al Sisi.

Between January and February 2015, just a few months before the massacre of Ethiopian Christians, 20 Coptic Egyptians and one of their Ghanaian work mates were slaughtered by jihadists on a Libyan beach not far from Sirte.

Coptic Catholic emeritus Bishop of Guizeh, Anba Antonios Aziz Mina, said: "What was striking is that the Ethiopian Church is called 'hostile Church' ... obviously these strange jihadists also follow the political implications of the meetings between the Churches. "But in the great pain, we continue to look at these events with the eyes of faith. The chain of martyrs has not finished, and will accompany the whole history until the end. Christians do not seek martyrdom, they want to live in peace and joy. But if martyrdom comes, it is comforting to see that it can be accepted with the same peace which was accepted by the Copts who pronounced the name of Christ and they relied on Him as they were being slaughtered. The Church has never complained about martyrdom, but has always celebrated martyrs as those in whom, while they are being killed, the great and consoling victory of Christ shines."

The remains of the Coptic Egyptians in Libya together with their Ghanaian workmate were identified at the end of September 2017 in a mass grave on the Libyan coast, beheaded not far from the town of Sirte. Their bodies had been found with their hands tied behind their back, wearing the same orange-colored tracksuits they wore in the macabre video filmed by the executioners at the time of their decapitation. Today a shrine-museum at the cathedral dedicated to the 'Martyrs of Libya' and erected in the Egyptian village of Our, in the region of Samalut, also keeps coins found in the pockets of Egyptian bodies martyred and their shoes, along with some ID documents and work records on which two of them wrote their daily work activities.

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