Egyptian security forces
killed 12 Mexicans and Egyptians and injured 10 "by accident" on
Monday, mistaking a tourist convoy for militants they were chasing in the
country's western desert, the ministry of interior said.
At least two Mexicans were
killed, Mexico's foreign ministry said in a statement.
A joint force from the
Egyptian police and military was chasing militants in the country's vast
western desert, which borders Libya, when it inadvertently opened fire on the
convoy.
The convoy was made up of four
four-wheel drive vehicles, the Egyptian interior ministry said in a statement,
and there will be an investigation into how and why the tourists entered an
off-limits area.
Mexican President Enrique Pena
Nieto condemned the attack on his Twitter account, describing it as a tragic
incident and demanding a full investigation.
"Mexico condemns these
deeds against our citizens and has demanded an exhaustive investigation of what
has occurred," he tweeted.
Egypt's tourism ministry
spokesman told state news agency MENA the convoy was at an off-limits site and
was using unlicensed cars. The convoy was taking part in an unapproved safari,
he said.
Mexican ambassador Jorge
Alvarez met with five Mexicans who were in stable condition in hospital,
Mexico's foreign ministry said.
The Mexican ministry said an
"undetermined" number of its country's nationals had been attacked
and that it was in the process of identifying the two who had been killed.
Egypt is battling an
insurgency that gained pace after the military ousted Islamist President
Mohamed Mursi of the Muslim Brotherhood in mid-2013 after mass protests against
his rule.
The insurgency, mounted by
Islamic State's Egyptian affiliate, has killed hundreds of soldiers and police
and has started to attack Western targets.
Earlier on Sunday Islamic
State released a statement carried by its supporters on Twitter saying it had
repelled an attack by the Egyptian military in the western desert.
While the insurgency has been
largely based in the Sinai Peninsula, attacks have taken place in Cairo and
other cities. In August, an Egyptian military aircraft crashed in the western
desert near the Libyan border while on a mission against Islamist militants,
killing four people.
Security officials say
militants operating from Libya to the west of Egypt have been trying to forge
ties with Islamists in the Sinai on the east side of the country.
Egyptian jets bombed Islamic
State targets in Libya in February, a day after the group there released a
video showing the beheading of 21 Egyptian Christians, drawing Cairo directly
into factional conflict across its border.
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