http://arabnews.com/news/449550

Egyptian Copts feel ignored, sidelined and neglected
Reuters

Saturday 27 April 2013



CAIRO: Egypt’s Christians feel sidelined, ignored and neglected by Muslim 
Brotherhood-led authorities, who proffer assurances but have taken little or no 
action to protect them from violence, Coptic Pope Tawadros II said.
In his first interview since emerging from seclusion after eight people were 
killed in sectarian violence between Muslims and Christians this month, the 
pope called official accounts of clashes at Cairo’s Coptic cathedral on April 7 
“a pack of lies.”
He also voiced dismay at attempts by President Muhammad Mursi’s allies to purge 
thousands of judges appointed under ousted President Hosni Mubarak, saying the 
judiciary was a pillar of Egyptian society and should not be touched.
“There is a sense of marginalization and rejection, which we can call social 
isolation,” the pope told Reuters of the feelings of Christians, who he said 
make up at least 15 percent of Egypt’s 84 million people.
Asked about the government’s response to this month’s attacks, he said: “It 
made a bad judgment and it was negligent... I would have expected better 
security for the place and the people.”
Mursi and his ministers tried to mend fences with the 60-year-old Coptic 
pontiff after the April 5 clashes in the town of El Khusus, north of Cairo, in 
which four Christians and one Muslim were killed.
Sectarian violence spread to the capital’s sprawling St. Mark’s Cathedral, the 
pope’s headquarters, after the funerals. “Sometimes we get nice feelings from 
officials, but such feelings require actions, and the actions are slow, and 
maybe little, and sometimes don’t exist at all,” the pope said.
The black-robed pontiff was particularly scathing about an account of the 
cathedral violence posted on the Facebook page of Mursi’s national security 
adviser, Essam Haddad.
“It is 100 percent rejected,” Tawadros said. “This statement was in English, 
directed to the US State Department, and was sent with a CD to explain their 
position and to cover up, but this statement is a pack of lies. It did not tell 
the truth.”
Haddad’s office said Christians had instigated the clashes by vandalizing cars 
outside the cathedral during the funeral procession, and that firearms and 
petrol bombs had been used from inside the church compound, provoking the 
security forces.
A Reuters witness saw at least two people carrying guns and petrol bombs on the 
roof of the cathedral that day, but the pope said mourners had merely been 
reacting to an assault.


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