http://www.aljazeera.com/news/middleeast/2012/09/201292820814460621.html

      Coptic Christian families flee Egyptian Sinai  
     
      Series of death threats from suspected Islamist fighters prompt several 
families to leave the peninsula.
      Last Modified: 28 Sep 2012 21:07  


     
        
      Several Christian families have fled their homes in Egypt's Sinai 
Peninsula after receiving death threats from suspected 
      Islamist fighters, AFP news agency reports quoting officials and 
residents.

      Officials at the local church informed the authorities of the threats, 
but no action was taken, they said on Friday.

      Mikhail Antoine, the priest of El Arish church, said "the families moved 
voluntarily because they feared for their lives after the threats".

      Reuters news agency reported on Friday that up to nine families living in 
the border area with Israel had left their homes.

      Last week, flyers began circulating in Egyptian side of the town of Rafah 
on the Gaza Strip border demanding that its tiny Coptic population move out, 
residents said.

      Days later, a shop belonging to one of the families was fired on with 
automatic rifles, witnesses said.

      The events prompted the families to leave Rafah but there were 
conflicting accounts over whether they had done so voluntarily or been evicted.

      "The families have left Rafah and gone to al-Arish," one official said on 
condition of anonymity.

      Another official denied that any Coptic families had left at all.

      Representatives of the families, many of whom hold government jobs as 
well private businesses, sat down with the governor of North Sinai earlier this 
week and asked to be transfered to the nearby town of al-Arish, the official 
said.

      The events come amid heightened sectarian tensions in the country, 
particularly in the Sinai peninsula where the armed forces launched an 
unprecedented campaign in August to root out Islamist fighters.

      Increasing fear

      It is not the first time Copts have been forced to leave their homes.

      In February, eight Coptic families were evicted from the village of 
Sharbat in northern Egypt following clashes prompted by rumours of an illicit 
affair between a Coptic man and a Muslim woman.

      Copts have been nervous since Islamists came to power following an 
uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak last year.



           
              
      They have also been fearing the backlash from an anti-Islam film 
apparently produced by a Copt in the US that has led to violent protests 
worldwide, and that they believe will lead to further persecution at home.

      The film, entitled The Innocence of Muslims, caused outrage for mocking 
Islam and portraying the Prophet Muhammad as violent and immoral. 

      An Egyptian court upheld on Thursday the six-year sentence of an Egyptian 
Christian teacher for mocking the prophet and insulting the president.

      A day earlier, the trial opened of another Copt, Albert Saber, who is 
accused of blasphemy, insulting religions and inciting sectarianism through his 
internet postings, including clips form the anti-Islam film.

      Saber faces up to five years behind bars in a case that has drawn 
condemnation from human rights groups and raised concerns over freedom of 
expression under Mohamed Morsi, Egypt's first president since Hosni 
      Mubarak was toppled by a popular uprising.

      Egypt's Christians, who make up six to 10 pe rcent of the country's 
population of 82 million, have regularly complained of discrimination and 
marginalisation. They have also been the target of numerous sectarian attacks.
     


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