Muslim Attack Injures 23 Coptic
Christians
Source: Christian Post Reporter - Ethan Cole
Mar 13, 2010
Twenty-three
Coptic Christians were injured by Muslim extremists Friday after an
attack on a church community center, said an Egyptian Bishop.
The attack occurred after a sermon by a radical sheikh and lasted 10
hours before security forces put a stop to it, said Bishop Bejemy to
The Associated Press on Saturday. The group of young Muslim men
threw firebombs at the Coptic center and at nearby homes in Marsa
Matruh, a seaport city in northern Egypt.
According to Egyptian officials, assailants were angry about a new
fence erected around the center.
The attack on Copts in Marsa Matruh took place the same day the U.S.
Commission on International Religious Freedom issued a statement
condemning the Egyptian justice system for not prosecuting violence
against Copts.
An Egyptian judge recently acquitted four Muslim men of the murder
of a Coptic man. USCIRF called it “the latest example in a growing
pattern of instances where individuals have not been brought to
justice after committing violent acts against Christians and their
property.”
Coptic Christian Farouk Attallah was murdered on Oct. 19, 2009.
Attallah’s Christian son was involved in a romantic relationship
with a Muslim girl. The Muslim men planned to murder the son, but
when they could not find him they killed his father. Despite
reported witnesses, the court said there was insufficient evidence
and acquitted the men.
“This is one of more than a dozen incidents USCIRF has followed in
the last year or so in which Coptic Christians have been the targets
of violence,” said USCIRF Chair Leonard Leo, who led a USCIRF
fact-finding delegation to Egypt in January. “This upsurge in
violence and the failure to prosecute those responsible fosters a
growing climate of impunity."
“We call on the government to appeal the verdict in the Attallah
murder and bring the perpetrators to justice,” Leo said.
Since 2002, Egypt has been on the USCIRF “Watch List” for its
serious religious freedom violations, including widespread problems
of discrimination, intolerance, and other human rights violations
against members of religious minorities.
According to Egypt’s constitution, Islam is the “religion of the
state” and the country’s “principle source of legislation.”
Coptic Christians, who make up about 10 percent of Egypt’s
population, complain that they are discriminated against in all
aspects of social life, from education to government representation.
They also voice grievance over the law that requires them to have
high-level government permission in order to repair or rebuild
churches. Even though they make such requests for permission,
Christians are rarely, if ever, granted the right to repair or build
churches. Muslims, however, are allowed to freely build mosques
without such government permission.