CAIRO: Egypt transferred the security chief of a province south of Cairo where Daesh militants last week killed 29 Christians travelling to a remote monastery in the desert, an acknowledgement of the lapses by authorities in dealing with the attack.

According to an Interior Ministry statement late on Monday, Maj-General Faisal Dewidar has been transferred from his post and assigned the position of deputy director of the security forces. It is not clear if the position is in Minya.

Dewidar’s transfer was ratified as part of a wider reshuffle in the police that included 13 other Interior Ministry officials who were removed from their posts and appointed elsewhere.

The attack on Coptic Christians last Friday, on the eve of the start of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, has shocked many in Egypt. It was the fourth assault targeting Christians since December — attacks that have been claimed by Daesh and that have killed more than 100 people in all.

IN the Minya attack, masked gunmen ambushed a bus carrying the Copts to St Samuel the Confessor monastery, about 220km south of Cairo, unleashing mayhem. Later, survivors of the attack recounted moments of horror, with children hiding under their seats to escape gunfire.

Egypt responded to the attack by launching a series of air strikes that targeted what it said were militant bases in eastern Libya in which assailants in the Minya attack were trained.

The independent Cairo daily Al Masry Al Youm reported on Tuesday that an investigation has found there were no security forces on the stretch of the desert road leading to the Minya monastery or on nearby roads, allowing the assailants to easily escape.

In April, Daesh bombed two churches in the northern cities of Tanta and Alexandria as Coptic Christians were celebrating Palm Sunday. President Abdul Fattah Al Sissi declared a three-month state of emergency afterward.

Daesh has vowed to step up attacks on Coptic Christians, who account for about 10 per cent of Egypt’s 93 million people.