Considering the historical facts of Islam and its criminal founder, how is
it even possible to 'insult' Islam?
 
B 


Christians acquitted of insulting Islam

Defendant says hardest part of jailing was isolation in 3 foot by 5 foot
cell

Posted: November 9, 2007

1:00 a.m. Eastern

C 2007 WorldNetDaily.com 

 

Adel Faltas

Two Christians connected to a Canadian ministry working in Egypt, a nation
known for persecuting those who are not Muslims, have been acquitted of
charges they insulted Islam and released from a three-month detention,
according to new reports from
<http://etools.780net.com/a/jgroup/bg_wwwpersecutioncom_wnd-vompp_9.html>
Voice
<http://etools.780net.com/a/jgroup/bg_wwwpersecutioncom_wnd-vompp_9.html>
<http://etools.780net.com/a/jgroup/bg_wwwpersecutioncom_wnd-vompp_9.html> of
the Martyrs, a worldwide ministry to the Persecuted Church. 

The report said family and friends, their lawyers, members of the clergy and
others gathered at the home of Adel Fawzy Faltas, 61, this week to celebrate
the court decision that also threw out unsubstantiated charges of
"tarnishing Egypt's reputation abroad." 

Also detained, then released, was Peter Ezzat Mounir, 25. Faltas heads the
Egyptian branch of the Canadian-based
<http://www.wnd.com/redir/r.asp?http://www.m-e-c-a.com/slidshow.php?slid=18&;
lang=eng> Middle
<http://www.wnd.com/redir/r.asp?http://www.m-e-c-a.com/slidshow.php?slid=18&;
lang=eng>
<http://www.wnd.com/redir/r.asp?http://www.m-e-c-a.com/slidshow.php?slid=18&;
lang=eng> East Christians Association, a religious liberty group, and Mounir
is an associate with the group. 

"Praise God for the release.," said VOM. "Pray for Christians in Egypt to
remain faithful in their relationship with Jesus Christ despite being
treated as second-class citizens. 

(Story continues below) 

[Blocked Ads] 

Egypt detained the two activists months ago, and Faltas said probably the
most difficult part of the ordeal was spending the first two weeks in an
isolation cell about five feet long and three feet wide. 

According to Christian Solidarity International, members of Egypt's State
Security Investigations took the two into custody, and confiscated computers
and documents from their homes. 

The prisoners were held at the Lazoghly Square headquarters of the federal
agency and security statements accused them of insulting Islam, preaching
Christianity and maintaining an unlawful association with a foreign
organization. For a long initial period, they were held completely
incommunicado. 



Peter Ezzat Mounir

The group's corporate identity statement calls for secularism, equality and
full citizenship for Christians in Egypt, as well as the rest of the Middle
East. 

CSI had raised concerns for the men's health and safety. 

"Some of the atrocities and malicious practices of the Egyptian police came
to public notice when bloggers managed to publish videos of torture and
abuse of citizens at the hands of the police," CSI said. 

"I was always a free man," Faltas told Compass Direct News. "When you
respect yourself and what you are doing, then you are free." 

John Eibner, CSI-USA's chairman, had written President Bush asking for help
in the situation. 

"The arrests of Messrs. Fawzy Faltas and Ezzat Mounir take place against a
background of increasing state-sponsored persecution of Christians in Egypt
and growing intolerance of Christians and other religious minorities
throughout the Middle East. If present trends of violence, intimidation and
discrimination continue, the tragic fate of oriental Jewry could soon befall
Middle Eastern Christians," he said. 

 <http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=56589> As WND also
<http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=56589>
<http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=56589> has reported, an
Egyptian Christian who had fled his home nation has been given temporary
permission to remain in the United States because he, "most assuredly has a
right not to be tortured," a federal court as concluded. 

The court pointedly concluded that "diplomatic assurances" of his religious
rights "by a country known to have engaged in torture" weren't reassuring. 

Officials reported the arrests followed increased MECA activity in Egypt
including the submission of a lawsuit against Egypt President Hosni Mubarak
and other members of the Egyptian government on behalf of victims of the
anti-Christian al-Kosheh riots in 2000, which left 21 Christians dead. 

Also ruffling feathers lately have been a book documenting the persecution
of Egyptian Christians and the high-profile legal case in which a convert to
Christianity petitioned to have the government recognize his change in
religious affiliation. 

The U.S. Copts Association said the arrests likely were triggered
specifically by the men's reporting on the killing of an Egyptian Christian
by two police officers. 

The day before they were arrested, the Copts Association said, the two had
investigated reports a Coptic worker in Cairo was thrown from his balcony by
two members of the Egyptian police after he refused to pay them extortion
money. 

"It appeared that two policemen had stopped Nasser Sediq Gadallah on his way
home from work and demanded money by force. He refused to pay and went and
filed a report with the prosecutor's office charging them with extortion and
brutality. Eyewitnesses reported that both members of the police visited
Naser's home shortly after he filed his report and tried to force him to
withdraw his complaints from the prosecutors' office. When he refused, they
threw him off his balcony in the presence of his family and other
eyewitnesses," the report said. 

The report said a short time later police reported the death as a suicide,
but Ezzat and others took pictures of the crime scene, interviewed witnesses
on film and encouraged the family to report the death. 

 <http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=56929> WND also
<http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=56929>
<http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=56929> recently reported on
two young Egyptian boys who were ordered to take a school test that would
result in their conversion to Islam. 

They wrote, "I am Christian," on the exam papers, knowing in advance that
could very well spell the end of their educations. Now a U.S.-based
organization is lobbying for international pressure on Egypt to quit forcing
Christians into such no-win situations. 

Their situation arose because of the Islamic law demand that children follow
their father's faith if it is Islam. Their father, who abandoned the family
a number of years ago, had converted to Islam. The nation's education
ministry then requires children to take - and pass - a test on Islam in
order for them to be advanced in school. No passing grade, no more
schooling, officials said. 

 

 <http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=58588> 

 



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