Relatives of victims react in front of a Coptic church that was bombed on Sunday in Tanta, Egypt, April 9. ─ Reuters
About 250 Christians took refuge in the Suez Canal city of Ismailiya after IS released a video in February calling for attacks on the religious minority.
Egypt's army is waging a counter-insurgency against an IS affiliate in Sinai, which has claimed scores of attacks against police and army positions.
President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, who as army chief helped the military to remove Morsi, defended his security forces in a televised address soon afterwards.
“(The attacks aim to) destabilise the fabric of Egypt... to give the impression that one group isn't protected as it should be,” Sisi said at the time.
Following Morsi's ouster, mobs attacked dozens of churches and Christian properties.
Pope Francis is due to visit Cairo on April 28-29 to show solidarity with Egypt's Christian community.
The pontiff will visit the site of the December church attack next to Saint Mark's Coptic Orthodox Cathedral ─ the seat of Coptic Christian Pope Tawadros II.
'We feel targeted'
A shift in IS group's tactics, which has waged a low-level conflict for years in the Sinai peninsula against soldiers and police, to targeting Christian civilians and broadening its reach into Egypt's mainland is a potential turning point in a country trying to prevent a provincial insurgency from spiralling into wider sectarian bloodshed.
Egypt's Christian community has felt increasingly insecure since IS spread through Iraq and Syria in 2014, ruthlessly targeting religious minorities. In 2015, 21 Egyptian Christians working in Libya were killed by IS.
“Of course we feel targeted, there was a bomb here about a week ago but it was dismantled. There's no security,” said another Christian woman in Tanta referring to an attack earlier this month near a police training centre that killed one policeman and injured 15.
Copts face regular attacks by Muslim neighbours, who burn their homes and churches in poor rural areas, usually in anger over an inter-faith romance or the construction of a church.