Christians make up 10 percent of
Egypt's population. Many say they have
experienced persecution (PA)
Sectarian violence
against Christians has recently peaked in the south of the country
A Muslim mob in
southern Egypt stabbed a Coptic Christian to death over a personal feud on
Monday, stoking anger among Christians amid a spike in assaults on their
community.
Bishop Makarios of the
southern Minya governorate said the mob attacked the families of two priests
with knives and batons in the village of Tahna al-Gabal late Sunday.
A family member, Fam
Khalaf, 27, was killed and the father of one of the priests was wounded. Police
said they arrested four people in connection with the incident.
On Monday, mourners
gathered at a local church for prayers for the dead and protests. Marching to
the graveyard, they chanted “with blood and soul, we redeem the cross.”
Christians make up 10
per cent of Egypt’s mostly Muslim population. Sectarian violence occasionally
erupts, mainly in rural communities in the south. Islamic extremists have also
targeted Christians.
On Saturday, a group
of Muslims attacked and torched houses of Christians in the village of
Abu-Yacoub, also in Minya, following a rumour that a Christian intended to turn
a kindergarten into a church. Security forces arrested at least 14 people. Last
week, in another Minya village, Kom al-Lufi, a group of hard-liners attacked
and torched houses of Christians after a similar rumour.
In May, a Muslim mob
stripped an elderly Christian woman of her clothes and paraded her on the
streets of another Minya village, following a rumour that her son had an affair
with a Muslim woman. The incident sparked public uproar and prompted Egypt’s
President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi to publicly vow to bring the attackers to
justice.
Egypt’s Orthodox
Coptic Christians strongly supported el-Sissi’s ouster of his Islamist
predecessor Mohammed Morsi, who hails from the Muslim Brotherhood group.
Following Morsi’s toppling, many Islamists claimed that Christians had
conspired with the military against them. Attacks on Christian homes,
businesses and churches subsequently surged in the south.
No comments:
Post a Comment