Refl: Untuk melihat video footage, click situs di bawah ini :

http://english.aljazeera.net/news/middleeast/2011/10/2011109155853144870.html


Deadly Cairo clashes over Coptic protest 
At least 19 people reported killed as riots erupt during Coptic Christian 
demonstration against destruction of a church.
Last Modified: 09 Oct 2011 16:51 
At least 19 people have been killed and dozens more injured in riots that 
erupted in Cairo when Coptic Christians protested against the recent 
destruction of a church, health ministry officials say.

The Copts were demonstrating outside the state television building in central 
Cairo on Sunday when they clashed with locals.

Military vehicles were set on fire and thick black smoke rose along the Nile 
outside the state television building, the state-run station reported.

The clashes spread to nearby Tahrir Square and the area around it, drawing in 
thousands of people.

They battled each other with rocks and firebombs, some tearing up pavement for 
ammunition and others collecting stones in boxes.

At one point, a group of youths with at least one riot policeman among them 
dragged a protester by his legs for a long distance.

During the protest, led by several Coptic bishops, the demonstrators burnt 
photos of Mustafa al-Sayed, the governor of Aswan province where a church was 
destroyed.

The Coptic church in Merinab village was attacked after al-Seyyed was reported 
as saying Copts had built it without the required planning permission.

'Utter chaos'

Al Jazeera's Rawya Rageh, reporting from Cairo, said "utter chaos" prevailed in 
the centre of the capital.

Rageh said: "It was supposed to be a peaceful protest, demanding that Coptic 
rights should be fulfilled. But it soon escalated into violence, with people on 
balconies pelting the demonstrators with stones, clearly disagreeing with the 
cause of the Coptic demonstrators."

The Christian protesters said their demonstration began as a peaceful attempt 
to sit in at the television building. But then, they said they came under 
attack by thugs in plainclothes who rained stones down on them and fired 
pellets.

"The protest was peaceful. We wanted to hold a sit-in, as usual," Essam 
Khalili, a protester wearing a white shirt with a cross drawn on it, said.

"Thugs attacked us and a military vehicle jumped over a sidewalk and ran over 
at least 10 people. I saw them."

Wael Roufail, another protester, corroborated the account.

"I saw the vehicle running over the protesters. Then they opened fired at us," 
he said.

Khalili said protesters set fire to army vehicles when they saw them hitting 
the protesters.

Television footage of the riots showed some of the Coptic protesters attacking 
a soldier, while a priest tried to protect him. One soldier collapsed in tears 
as ambulances rushed to the scene to take away the injured.

Military council blamed

Christians blame Egypt's ruling military council for being too lenient on those 
behind a spate of anti-Christian attacks since the ouster of Hosni Mubarak in 
February.

Egypt's Coptic Christian minority makes up about 10 per cent of the country of 
more than 80 million people.

As Egypt undergoes a chaotic power transition and security vacuum in the wake 
of this year's uprising, Christians are particularly worried about the 
increasing show of force by the conservatives.

Tensions are not uncommon between Copts and the country's majority Muslims. In 
March, 13 people were killed in sectarian clashes around the Cairo 
neighbourhood of Manshiyet Nasser, shortly after a church was torched in the 
village of Sol, south of the capital.


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