Egypt's former grand mufti survives assassination attempt
Egypt's former Grand Mufti Ali Gomaa survived an assassination attempt on Friday, three security sources said.
Two men on a motorcycle fired guns on Gomaa as he entered a mosque in the October 6 area of Cairo, the sources said.
He was unharmed and one of his body guards received a minor injury to the foot. The gunmen immediately fled the scene.
"If Ali Gomaa dies there are millions who will take his place," Gomaa told state television shortly after news of the attempt was made public. "I gave my sermon right after my survival."
Like many of the top religious figures in the Egyptian state, Gomaa is an adherent of Sufism, whose practices have sometimes set them at odds with other strands of the Muslim faith.
Gomaa is an outspoken critic of groups such as the Muslim Brotherhood, which the Egyptian military removed from power in 2013 after mass protests against the then president, Mohamed Morsi.
He is also close to President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, who led the military's ouster of Morsi, and campaigned for his election.
"I tell Sisi remember your God and pray to him and walk in his blessing. God will grant you victory. This proves you are on the right path," Gomaa said.
The grand mufti is in charge of issuing religious edicts as well as issuing a non-binding opinion on all capital sentences.
No group claimed the attempt on Gomaa's life.
Egypt is facing an insurgency led by Islamic State's local branch in North Sinai, where hundreds of soldiers and police were killed. There have been attacks in Cairo and other cities as well.
The country's top prosecutor was assassinated by a car bomb in June last year.
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