Egypt attack: Mexico confirms eight nationals died Published duration 16 September 2015

media caption The tourists had stopped for lunch when their convoy was attacked

A Mexican official confirmed on Tuesday that eight Mexican tourists were among the 12 people who died in an attack by the Egyptian army.

The 12 were mistakenly killed by Egyptian security forces in an anti-terror operation on Sunday.

Egypt says it mistook the tourists for Islamist militants, whom its forces were pursuing in the Western Desert.

It has apologised, but has insisted the group were in a restricted area. Local sources deny the claim.

Egypt has been battling Islamist militants for years, with attacks escalating since the 2013 ousting of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi.

Until recently most of the fighting has taken place in the Sinai Peninsula with occasional attacks taking place in Cairo and other cities.

'Mistake'

Two of the dead have been identified as Luis Barajas Fernandez and Maria de Lourdes Fernandez Rubio.

Another one of those dead is believed to be Rafael Bejarano Rangel, whose relatives were told by tour organisers that he was among those killed.

Reyna Torres, who heads the Mexican foreign ministry's department for the protection of nationals abroad, said forensic test were still being carried out on the other bodies.

Ten people, among them six Mexicans were also injured in the attack.

Mexico's Foreign Minister Claudia Ruiz Massieu has travelled to Cairo with some of the relatives.

She will visit survivors of the incident and also meet Egyptian officials "to obtain first-hand information that would clarify the circumstances of this deplorable event", according to a foreign ministry statement.

Bahariya oasis

image copyright AFP image caption The White Desert is famous for its unusual wind-eroded rock formations

Spanning some 2,000 sq km (770 sq miles), the Bahariya oasis is surrounded by desert

It is a tourist spot and starting place for trips to the famous White and Black Deserts

More than 200 mummies were found in a Greco-Roman cemetery known as the Valley of the Golden Mummies

The ancient Temple of Alexander the Great lies 5km east of Bawati, the only town in Bahariya.

The area had been considered relatively safe until now

But residents and security officials told the New York Times that in recent days IS militants had kidnapped a local guide suspected of having acted as a government informer

The tour group had been travelling in a convoy of four 4x4s near the Bahariya oasis, a popular tourist location. The organisers said they had stopped for a picnic when the group was attacked.

The interior ministry said an Apache helicopter targeted the tourists "by mistake".

Egypt's ambassador to Mexico City, Yasser Shaban, said the tourists' 4x4 vehicles resembled those used by the militants the security forces were chasing.

'Spiritual journey'

David Diaz Bejarano, the nephew of Rafael Bejarano Rangel, said his relatives regularly travelled to the area.

"They've been going to Egypt for the past 10 years and every year they go to this place once or twice," he told BBC Mundo.

image copyright Reuters image caption Relatives of Mexican victims of the attack in Egypt's Western Desert were briefed by Mexican officials

He said that his uncle's idea of travelling to the Western Desert was to find space to reflect. "It was a spiritual journey," he said.

Mr Bejarano Rangel's mother, Maricela Rangel, is among those wounded.

According to relatives, Ms Rangel was the one who had been organising the trips from Mexico to Egypt for a decade.

They said that she had been using the same group of guides, whom she trusted.