Hehehe.... ini khusus unt anjing2 buduk piaraan orang Islam spt suryana dan
Teddy.

Pergilah ke Mesir unt jadi anjing buduk piaraan orang Islam yg setia.


http://www.jihadwatch.org/2013/07/egypt-muslim-mob-attacks-christian-homes-and-shops-while-chanting-there-is-no-god-but-allah-and-the-.html

Egypt: Muslim mob attacks Christian homes and shops while chanting, "There
is no god but Allah and the Christians are Allah's
enemies"<http://www.jihadwatch.org/2013/07/egypt-muslim-mob-attacks-christian-homes-and-shops-while-chanting-there-is-no-god-but-allah-and-the-.html>


  Revenge for Morsi, couched in specifically Islamic terms. "After
campaigning for Morsi's ouster, Egypt's Christians come under retaliation
from Islamists," by Hamza Hendawi for the Associated
Press<http://www.therepublic.com/view/story/a2993adf26174fdb8e1cbe8664ca2b50/ML-Egypt-Anti-Christian-Backlash>,
July 10 (thanks to Dalia Ezzat):


CAIRO — With a mob of Muslim extremists on his tail, the Christian
businessman and his nephew climbed up on the roof and ran for their lives,
jumping from building to building in their southern Egyptian village.
Finally they ran out of rooftops.

Forced back onto the street, they were overwhelmed by several dozen men.
The attackers hacked them with axes and beat them with clubs and tree
limbs, killing Emile Naseem, 41. The nephew survived with wounds to his
shoulders and head and recounted the chase to The Associated Press.

The mob's rampage through the village of Nagaa Hassan, burning dozens of
Christian houses and stabbing to death three other Christians as well, came
two days after the military ousted Islamist President Mohammed Morsi from
power. It was no coincidence the attackers focused on Naseem and his
family: He was the village's most prominent campaigner calling for Morsi's
removal.

Some Christians are paying the price for their activism against Morsi and
his Islamist allies in a backlash over his ouster last week.

Since then, there has been a string of attacks on Christians in provinces
that are strongholds of hard-liners. In the Sinai Peninsula, where militant
groups run rampant, militants gunned down a priest in a drive-by shooting
as he walked in a public market.

Egypt's Christian minority, about 10 percent of the population, long
shunned politics for fear of reprisals, relying on their church to make
their case to those in power. That changed in the revolutionary fervor when
autocrat Hosni Mubarak was toppled in 2011, as Christians started to demand
a say in the country's direction.

But they took it to a new level during Morsi's year in office and the
empowerment of his Islamist allies. The new Coptic Christian pope, Tawadros
II, enthroned in November, openly criticized the president. He told
Christians they were free to actively participate in politics and that the
church will not discourage them.

"The Christians have emerged from under the robes of the clergy and will
never go back," said Ezzat Ibrahim, an activist from Minya, a southern
province with a large Christian community.

It was a risky gamble for a minority that has long felt vulnerable, with
its most concentrated communities often living in the same rural areas
where the most vehement and vocal Islamists hold sway.

During Morsi's year in office, some of his hard-line allies increasingly
spoke of Christians as enemies of Islam and warned them to remember they
are a minority. When the wave of protests against Morsi began on June 30,
Brotherhood media depicted it as dominated by Christians — and to
hard-liners, it smacked of Christians rising up against a Muslim ruler.

The worst anti-Christian backlash since Morsi's July 3 ouster was the
attack in Nagaa Hassan, a dusty village on the west bank of the Nile River,
not far from the most majestic ancient Egyptian archaeological sites in the
city of Luxor.

The body of a Muslim villager was discovered at dawn on July 5. The cry
went out around the village that Christians killed him. A mob of several
hundred, led by men wearing the hallmark long beards of ultraconservative
Salafis as well as more extreme movements, went on a rampage, according to
witnesses and security officials speaking to the AP.

They smashed the windows and doors of Christian homes, ransacked
Christian-owned stores and set them ablaze — damaging about 30 homes and
stores in all. Muslim residents who tried to stop them were brushed aside,
sometimes threatened with violence as well. At least a dozen Christian
families took refuge in the local Church of St. John The Baptist, the
church's priest, Father Vassilios, told the AP.

The crowd targeted in particular Naseem, besieging the apartment building
of his cousins where he and his wife hid. Their three children had been
taken earlier to a relative's home for their safety. The mob set fires in
the building, while the families with women and children fled to the upper
floors.

Security forces pulled up to the building, backing an armored personnel
carrier up to the entrance to evacuate those inside, according to witnesses
and activists briefed on the day's events. But the mob, outnumbering
police, refused to let the men inside leave — so the police told the
families they would only take the women and children, she said.

Naseem and several other men initially put on women's clothes to escape
detection by the mob waiting close by for the police to leave so it could
set upon the men, said el-Ameer, the nephew,

The police still refused to take the men, fearing the mob outside would see
through the ruse and attack the armored police car that came to evacuate
the Christians, said el-Ameer and activists. Martha Zekry, Naseem's wife,
begged the police to take her husband, pleading with them that he would not
survive if left behind. The officer in charge said he would come back for
Naseem. He never did.

Once the police pulled away with the women and children, the attackers
stormed the building. Naseem tore off the women's clothes and fled to the
rooftops with his nephew, al-Ameer said. Naseem's cousins, Romani and
Muhareb Nosehi, and a neighbor Rasem Tadros, never made it out of the
building, stabbed and beaten to death on the spot.

Naseem's friends and family say he was targeted because of his activism
against Morsi. In the months before Morsi's ouster, he was energetically
collecting signatures in the village for Tamarod, or "Rebel," the youth-led
activist campaign that collected signatures nationwide on a petition
demanding Morsi's removal. It organized the June 30 protests that brought
out millions.

"Emile was the de facto Tamarod leader in the village and that did not
escape the notice of the militants," said Naseem's best friend and fellow
activist Emile Nazeer. "He, like other activists, received threatening text
messages for weeks before he was killed."

"Almost everyone in Nagaa Hassan loved my uncle. He spoke a lot about
politics and people listened to what he had to say," said el-Ameer,
Naseem's nephew. "He paid the price."

Shenouda el-Ameer, a close relative, said local Islamists took advantage of
the Muslim's murder to blame it on Christians and target Naseem for his
political activity.

Luxor's security chief Khaled Mamdouh said 17 villagers, including eight
Christians, were being questioned about the murder and the violence that
followed. They said some of them were referred to prosecutors to be
charged. Security forces, meanwhile, were deployed in the village, whose
estimated 7,000 residents are about 20 percent Christian.

Father Vassilios said he did not know of incidents of sectarian violence in
Nagaa Hassan, suggesting that the increased anti-Christian rhetoric by
hard-liners and the polarization during Morsi's rule had an effect.

"Relations between Muslims and Christians were so good I always thought it
was special," he told the AP. "Emile (Naseem) was a political revolutionary
who served his community as best as he could."

In the week after Morsi's ouster, extremists carried out attacks on
Christians in at least six of the country's 27 provinces. The shooting of
the priest in Sinai was the only other fatality.

In one of the most serious incidents, a mob of Morsi supporters attacked
Christian homes and shops in Dalaga, a village in southern Minya province
where Christians make up about 35 percent of the population, more than
three times the national average. *During its rampage, the crowd shouted,
"There is no god but Allah and the Christians are God's
enemies,"*according to police and villager Bushrah Iskharon, who
recounted the events
in a telephone interview with the AP....

  Posted by Robert <http://www.jihadwatch.org/> on July 10, 2013 3:06 PM


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



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