EGYPT: CHRISTIANS ARRESTED, SHOPS LOOTED IN VILLAGE

<http://www.compassdirect.org/en/display.php?page=news&lang=en&length=long&idelement=5700>http://www.compassdirect.org/en/display.php?page=news&lang=en&length=long&idelement=5700
 



Funeral incident leads to disproportionate response from Muslim mobs, police.

ISTANBUL, November 21 (Compass Direct News) – 
Authorities in an Egyptian village arrested 50 
Coptic Christians, whose shops were then looted, 
to pacify Muslims following violence that erupted 
on Nov. 4 over a Christian boy’s unwitting break with custom.

Muslim villagers attacked the homes and shops of 
Coptic Christians in violence-prone Tayyiba, a 
town with 35,000 Christians and 10,000 Muslims, 
after 14-year-old Copt Mina William failed to 
dismount his donkey as a funeral procession passed.

William was watching the procession in Tayibba, 
220 kilometers (137 miles) south of Cairo, with 
Nathan Yaccoub, also 14. William’s failure to 
dismount violated a local custom of showing 
respect, Copts United reported, and members of 
the procession reportedly beat him before 
completing the procession. William suffered minor injuries.

After the funeral procession, the processional 
members began throwing stones at the homes of 
local Copts and attacking their shops before 
police broke up the crowd with tear gas.

A priest said members of the procession did not 
attack the youths for showing disrespect but as 
an excuse to lash out against the community’s 
Christians for a previous episode of sectarian violence.

“These two children with the donkey didn’t know 
about the traditions,” said Father Metias Nasr, a 
Cairo-based priest with connections in areas 
south of the capital. “The Muslims there were 
angry about the last case of violence and wanted 
to create a new problem with these two children there.”

When the violence began, police presence 
increased significantly in the city. But rather 
than quell the unrest, police reportedly made 
matters worse for the Christians. After breaking 
up the crowd, officers detained 50 Copts and 10 Muslims.

A source told Compass that police arrested a 
disproportionate amount of Christians to create a 
false sense of equanimity and to pressure the 
Christians into “reconciliation” with the 
attackers so the Copts would not prosecute them. 
The arrested Christians have since been released.

In the two weeks since the attacks and looting, 
the increased police force in the village has 
harassed Copts through intimidation, “fines” and 
racketeering. Police have taken an estimated 
$50,000 from village Copts, the source said.

Once police lifted the curfew, Coptic shopkeepers 
returned to their stores to discover that they 
had been looted. Sources said the perpetrators 
were “supply inspectors,” local government 
inspectors who do quality control checks on 
goods. They gained access by smashing locks and doors of the shops.

The sources said supply inspectors plundered 
grocery stores, a poultry shop, an electronics store and a pharmacy.

According to Coptic weekly Watani, looters stole 
nearly $2,000 worth of goods from grocer Bishara 
Gayed. Another victim of the looting, an owner of 
a poultry shop who declined to give his name, 
blamed supply inspectors for running off with his stock.

A local clergyman condemned the violence.

“It is unreasonable that a mistake by some 
14-year-old should lead to all that rampage,” a 
village Coptic priest known as Father Augustinus 
told Watani. “Something ought to be done to halt all this.”

Orphanage Bulldozed

Numerous instances of sectarian violence have 
struck Tayyiba in the last few months.

Last month a Coptic Christian was killed over a 
dispute with a Muslim who wanted to buy his 
house. Violence escalated, resulting in damaged 
storefronts, 48 arrests and injuries sustained by 
three Christians and a Muslim.

Such quarrels typically arise from land ownership 
issues. A Coptic source told Compass that 
Christians in Tayyiba are generally wealthier 
than their Muslim counterparts, often leading to resentment.

Tayyiba was stable at press time, though the town 
is considered to be continually in danger of 
religious violence flaring. This situation is 
common throughout Egypt, Fr. Nasr told Compass.

“The village is like anywhere in Egypt,” he said. 
“In every place in Egypt we can say that in one 
minute everyone can be destroyed by fanatics, 
sometimes through the encouragement of security [forces].”

The Coptic Church has faced recent difficulties 
in other Egyptian cities, with government 
officials attempting to obstruct their religious 
activities. On Wednesday (Nov. 19), city 
officials in Lumbroso, Alexandria destroyed an 
unfinished but recently furnished Coptic 
orphanage owned by Abu-Seifein Church and worth 6 
million Egyptian pounds (US$1 million).

Officials claimed the building did not have a 
license, although church leaders said the 
demolition came on orders from the religiously 
zealous Islamic mayor. Ali Labib, former head of 
police and state security in Alexandria, in his 
two-year tenure as mayor has refused license 
applications for new church construction or 
rebuilding, said a Cairo-based Coptic priest who requested anonymity.

The priest said the orphanage was only able to 
obtain a license because it was issued before Labib’s tenure.

Islam is a growing presence in Egypt’s public 
sphere. While the government has attempted to 
crack down on extremists, Islamic civil groups 
that have drawn widespread support by offering 
cheap medical assistance and private lessons to 
school children include the Muslim Brotherhood, 
an Islamist organization with jihad in its credo 
that has been accused of violence.

The Muslim Brotherhood is well regarded by the 
average Egyptian, who equates the government with 
autocracy, corruption and repression, author and 
intellectual Tarek Heggy reportedly said. Over 
the last four decades, the Muslim Brotherhood has 
introduced its brand of fundamentalist Islam into 
Egyptian schools, mosques and media, he added.

Egypt’s ethnic Christians, known as Copts, belong 
to the Orthodox Church and number 12 million 
among the country’s 79 million inhabitants. There 
are smaller groups of Catholics and Protestants.

END


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Prayer for Unborn Life:
O GOD OF LIFE AND LOVE, You have given us the 
gift to participate with You to bring new life 
into the world.  But, all too often, the mother's 
womb, which should be a nursery of life, becomes 
instead a place of it's destruction.

Help us to remove this evil and ensure respect 
for all life made in Your image and likeness, 
called to fulfill its promise on this earth,
and destined to find a home with you for all eternity.

We ask this through Jesus Christ, Our Lord, Our God, Our Savior, and Our ALL.
Amen.

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