Ethnic cleansing thd non muslim terus berlangsung di negara2 di mana Islam 
berkuasa, sementara para anjing buduk piaraan orang Islam kayak suryana atau 
Obama sibuk ngejilatin pantat orang Islam.



http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5ipa01vRCq-Jqe3P7MCnOMM9gjZjA?docId=5716d3dde5774623ac90714105a87769


Egypt: Christians flee town after militant threats

By MAGGIE MICHAEL, Associated Press
– 23 hours ago   

CAIRO (AP) — Coptic Christian families have fled their homes in a 
town in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, fearing for their lives after receiving death 
threats from suspected Islamic militants, a local priest said 
Thursday.

Father Youssef Sobhi said that Islamic militants dropped leaflets on the 
doorsteps of shops owned by Copts in the city of Rafah 
near the border with Gaza and Israel, ordering them to leave town within 48 
hours and making an implicit warning of violence if they failed to 
do so. Two days later, masked militants on a motorcycle opened fire on 
one of the shops before speeding off, Sobhi said. No one was hurt in the 
shooting.

When Christians met Tuesday with the province's top 
government official, who was recently appointed by Egypt's new Islamist 
president, Mohammed Morsi, the governor promised to facilitate the 
Copts' move to the nearby city of el-Arish but did not offer to protect 
the community to ensure that it stayed in Rafah, according to the 
priest.
"I was shocked at the governor's response," Sobhi said. "This is simply 
displacement by the government's consent."

An Egyptian intelligence official confirmed that a number of Coptic 
families had fled Rafah because of a militant threat. Another security 
official denied the reports and said that no Christians were forced to 
leave. Both officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they are 
not authorized to brief the media.

It was not exactly clear how 
many Christians have left the town, but Sobhi said that the number of 
Copts in Rafah had dwindled from 14 families to two since the uprising 
that pushed longtime autocrat Hosni Mubarak from power in February 2011.

A first wave left Rafah after the only church in the town, The Holy 
Family Church, was looted, torched and destroyed in several militant 
attacks over the past year. The church is built on the site where 
Christians believe the Holy Family first stopped to rest after crossing 
into Egypt.

Sobhi was in the first group of Christians to flee, although he returns 
frequently to Rafah check on his parish.

Mamdouh Nasef, the Coptic shop owner who recently came under attack, said that 
his Muslim neighbors are urging him to stay and pledging to protect him.

"They can't guard me 24 hours a day, and I fear for my children," Nasef said 
by telephone. "My children were born here and Muslims here are like my 
brothers."

Nasef is still in Rafah, but plans to return to his hometown in southern Egypt.

There have been incidents of sectarian violence in Egypt in the past. In 
July, in the village of Dahshour south of Cairo a Muslim mob torched 
Christian homes and shops and damaged the local church, forcing many 
Coptic families to flee the village. The violence was sparked when a 
personal dispute swelled into violence and a Muslim man died.

In 
Sinai, the threats against the Christians, who are estimated at around 
10 percent of Egypt's population of 85 million, are a symptom of the 
broader lawlessness that has hit the peninsula since the popular 
uprising ousted Mubarak. Since then, security has deteriorated across 
Egypt, particularly in Sinai where heavily armed Islamic groups have 
exploited the security vacuum to wage attacks on police stations and 
call for the establishment of an Islamic state.

Militants from 
Rafah, along with those from the neighboring Gaza Strip who cross into 
Sinai through an elaborate network of underground tunnels, have also 
waged cross border attacks into Israel. In one of their most recent 
strikes, masked militants killed 16 Egyptian soldiers near the border in early 
August.

Under Mubarak, Christians complained of 
discrimination from the government, which did little to prevent attacks 
on the community by hardline Muslims. Many Christians fled to the United States 
and other Western countries, and tensions have risen since 
Mubarak's police state has given way to a state of lawlessness.

With the election of the country's first Islamist president, Mohammed Morsi 
of the Muslim Brotherhood, many Christians have grown increasingly 
concerned about their place in Egypt.

Those worries only deepened 
after Egyptian Coptic Christians in the United States posted a 14-minute clip 
entitled "Innocence of Muslims," which denigrates Islam and the 
Prophet Muhammad, portraying him as a womanizer, a fraud and a child 
molester. The film has sparked angry protests across the Muslim world as well 
as attacks on U.S. embassies, including one in Libya that killed 
the U.S. ambassador and three other Americans. The wave of protests 
began in Cairo, where demonstrators breached the walls of the U.S. 
Embassy.

Also Thursday, an Egyptian court has upheld a six-year 
jail sentence for a Coptic Christian school teacher convicted of 
insulting Islam and the country's Islamist president in postings on 
Facebook.

Egypt's MENA state news agency says a court in the 
southern province of Sohag agreed with a lower court ruling that found 
Michelle Bishoy, also known as Bishoy el-Behiri, guilty of blasphemy 
after posting pictures that were deemed offensive to Islam's Prophet 
Muhammad. The court also upheld Bishoy's conviction on charges of 
insulting Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi.

Thursday's ruling can be appealed.

The case is the second this month in which a Coptic Christian has been 
detained for posting material considered anti-Islamic on social 
networking sites.

Copyright ©  2012   The Associated Press. All rights reserved. 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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