The Islamic State jihadist group on Sunday released a video
purportedly showing the executions of some 30 Ethiopian Christians captured in
Libya.
The 29-minute video purports to show militants holding two
groups of captives, described in a text on the screen as “followers of the
cross from the enemy Ethiopian Church”.
A masked fighter in black brandishing a pistol makes a
statement threatening Christians if they do not convert to Islam.
The video then switches between footage of one group of
about 12 men being beheaded by masked militants on a beach and another group of
at least 16 being shot in the head in a desert area.
It was not immediately clear who the captives were or
exactly how many were killed.
Before the killings, the video shows purported footage of
Christians in Syria explaining how they had been given the choice of converting
to Islam or paying a special tax, and had decided to pay.
The video bore the logo of IS’s media arm and was similar to
footage the group released in the past, including of a group of 21 Coptic
Christians, mainly Egyptians, beheaded on a Libyan beach in February.
Several Libyan jihadist groups have pledged allegiance to
IS, the extremist organisation that seized control of large parts of Syria and
Iraq last year and declared an Islamic “caliphate”.
IS has carried out widespread atrocities and won the support
of jihadist groups across the region.
Libya has been wracked by unrest since the 2011 uprising
that toppled and killed dictator Moamer Kadhafi, with two opposing governments
and armed groups battling to control its cities and oil wealth.
UN-backed efforts to form a national unity government have
made little progress and officials have warned that Libya — awash with weapons
after Kadhafi’s overthrow — threatens to become a haven for jihadists on
Europe’s doorstep.
IS has persecuted minorities including Christians and its
executions of the Egyptian Copts prompted retaliatory air strikes from Cairo.
Egypt called for an international intervention against the
jihadists in Libya but Western diplomats expressed reservations, saying a
political deal must be the priority.
A US-led coalition of Western and Arab nations is carrying
out an air war against IS in Syria and in Iraq, where pro-government forces
have managed in recent months to retake some territory seized by the group.
The group’s attacks have raised fears for Christians across
the Middle East and been condemned by religious leaders.
See the video here
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