bare delle 36 vittime svizzere di Luxor in un hangar dell'aeroporto di zurigo

The coffins of the 36 Swiss victims of the Luxor attacks are lined up at Zurich airport

(Keystone/Peter Lauth)

“Massacre of the innocents”, “Death on the Nile”, “Horror in the Valley of the Kings”, “Swiss butchered in Luxor”: on November 18 the frontpage headlines of Swiss newspapers were all about the previous day’s killings.

At the archaeological site at Deir el-Bahari, near Luxor, a group of terrorists belonging to the Islamist organisation al-Gama’at al-Islamiyya had opened fire on a crowd of tourists: 62 dead, 36 of them Swiss.

Since 1970 there have been about 60 Swiss victims of terrorist attacks. The Luxor incident remains the deadliest ever attack on Swiss citizens.

Swiss are obviously not the only victims of terrorism. And Egypt is not the only country plagued by the phenomenon. Between 2012 and 2016, there were 33,000 terrorist attacks around the world, causing 153,000 deaths in a large number of countries, according to the Global Terrorism Databaseexternal link (GTD) of the University of Maryland, the largest of its kind*. With 6,300 victims, June 2014 was the deadliest month.

Following the January 2015 attack on the offices of Charlie Hebdo in Paris, the terrorist threat has returned to the fore in Europe. From Paris to Brussels, from London to Berlin, and not forgetting the recent attack in Barcelona, terrorism has been striking major cities across the continent. Though it is not a particular target of Islamic terrorism, Switzerland too needs to be better prepared for what might happen, Albert A. Stahel, a military strategy expert, told swissinfo.ch in November 2016.

Yet Europe is not the main focus of the violence. Since 2012, casualties of terrorism in Western Europe have made up less than 0.3% of the total number of victims. As our chart shows, the great majority of victims of attacks can be found in five Asian or African countries.

charts

Despite the marked increase in these attacks since 2000, mainly due to the activities of al-Qaeda, the Taliban, Boko Haram and the Islamic State, terrorist acts are in worldwide decline, according to the GTD. After peaking in 2014, the numbers both of attacks and victims went down in 2015 and 2016.

*A terrorist attack is defined by the GTD as the threatened or actual use of illegal force and violence by a non-state actor to attain a political, economic, religious, or social goal through fear, coercion, or intimidation.


(Translated by Terence MacNamee), swissinfo.ch

Neuer Inhalt

Horizontal Line


subscription form

Form for signing up for free newsletter.

Sign up for our free newsletters and get the top stories delivered to your inbox.

swissinfo EN

The following content is sourced from external partners. We cannot guarantee that it is suitable for the visually or hearing impaired.

Join us on Facebook!