Egypt's Christian leader calls for end of  sit-in
(AP, May 15, 2011) 
Cairo, Egypt - Egypt's top Christian leader called on his followers Sunday 
to  end a weeklong sit-in in front of a government building on the Nile 
after a mob  attacked the Christian protesters and their supporters, injuring 
78. 
The sit-in aimed to draw attention to the plight of Christians, who have 
been  the target of several attacks by Muslim fundamentalists in the weeks 
since  Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak was forced from office by a popular  
uprising. 
The head of Egypt's Coptic Orthodox Church, Pope Shenouda III, said in a  
statement that outsiders have infiltrated the sit-in of largely Christian  
demonstrators, making the situation even more explosive. 
"This has exceeded the mere expression of opinion," the statement said,  
"harming Egypt's reputation and your reputation." 
He warned that Egypt's military rulers and interim civilian government were 
 losing patience with the protesters and that they "will be the losers if 
this  sit-in continues." 
It was not immediately clear if the protesters - many of whom have been  
camping out on the riverbank in front of the state TV building - would heed 
his  call. 
Christians, who make up about 10 percent of Egypt's population, have felt  
increasingly insecure since 18 days of street protests brought down Mubarak, 
who  led the country for nearly 30 years until he was forced to resign on 
Feb.  11. 
The Christians, many of whom are Coptic, have complained that the interim  
government and security forces have failed to protect them and have allowed  
extremist Islamic groups to attack with impunity. 
Earlier this month, mobs of Muslims, apparently urged on by the  
ultraconservative Salafi sect of Islam, stormed the Virgin Mary Church in the  
Cairo 
neighborhood of Imbaba and set it ablaze. The attack was sparked by a  rumor 
that a Christian woman planned to marry a Muslim, which some religious  
purists consider to be forbidden. 
A short distance away, the mob tried to storm the Mar Mina Church, but were 
 held back by Christians who formed a human shield around the church and 
fought  for hours. 
Fifteen people were killed and more than 200 were injured in the melees. No 
 trial date has been set for those arrested in the attacks. 
Several weeks before the attacks on the churches, Egyptians led by 
hard-line  Islamists repeatedly rallied and marched to protest the appointment 
of a 
Coptic  Christian governor in the southern Egyptian province of Qena. 
Violence against the sit-in in Cairo erupted late Saturday night, when a 
mob  of more than 100 people lobbed rocks and firebombs and charged dozens of 
people  sleeping in the area. Some 15 Vehicles were also set on fire. 
Armored military vehicles later blocked cars and pedestrians from going to  
the state TV building. More than 35 people were arrested, security 
officials  said. 
Some of the Christian protesters fled, but others said they would continue  
their sit-in. 
Girgis Atef, who was injured in the melee, blamed the attack on thugs and  
complained that it took three hours for Egyptian security forces to respond. 
The  violence didn't end until early Sunday morning. 
"What is behind this military reluctance? Is it semi-collaboration?" he  
asked. 
Medhat Kalada, head of the Geneva-based United Copts organization, 
criticized  the sit-in and said that attention should be directed to political 
process, not  street protests. 
"Egypt is passing through a critical phase, and we should pay attention to  
the political process," said Kalada who was part of a Christian delegation 
that  met recently with Egypt's military rulers and said that the group 
received  assurances that Christian needs would be met. 
"I understand that the youth are angry, but we need wisdom now, not anger," 
 he said.

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