Copts Arrested in Egypt Following Attack on St. Mark's Cathedral
By Jeremy Reynalds
Senior Correspondent for ASSIST News Service
CAIRO
(ANS) -- Egyptian authorities have arrested four Coptic men who were at St. Mark's Cathedral when it was attacked last weekend.
According to a story
by human rights agency Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW), Shadi Sami
was arrested at 4 am, while Michael Morcos was arrested at 6 am by
Special Forces who stormed the back entrance of his apartment.
It
appears the men were detained for being on the grounds of St. Mark's
Cathedral at the time of the Sunday attack. Two other Coptic men were
also arrested, according to the Coptic Maspero Youth Union.
CSW
said the men were amongst hundreds of people who attended Sunday's
funeral at St. Mark's for four Coptic men who were killed in sectarian
violence on April 5 in Khosous, a town 10 miles from Cairo.
As
mourners left the funeral, they were attacked with stones, petrol bombs
and Molotov cocktails, forcing them to seek shelter in the grounds of
the Cathedral. As the stones and other missiles were thrown from the
roofs of surrounding buildings and by people who had climbed the walls
of the Cathedral, CSW said young Coptic men picked up sticks and rocks
to retaliate.
Two
Coptic men were killed during the violence and 84 were injured,
including Michael Morcos, who required sixteen stitches to the head
after being hit by a glass bottle. CSW said when police eventually
arrived at the scene, they fired teargas into the grounds of the
Cathedral but did nothing to end the attack, which continued for at
least five hours.
Andrew
Johnston, CSW's advocacy director, said in the news release, "These
arrests come at a time when the Coptic community in Egypt is still
coming to terms with an unprecedented attack on the headquarters of the
Coptic Orthodox Church and the violence in Khosous. Two Copts were
killed during the attack on the Cathedral; four more died in Khosous,
yet not one of their attackers has been arrested. Such discrepancies in
the discharge of justice contribute to impunity, and can only foster
more sectarianism."
Johnston
added, "They also sends a clear message that Christians are not viewed
as equal citizens, despite the government's verbal protestations to the
contrary, and the fact that Egypt is party to international covenants
that prohibit discrimination. Being in the Cathedral identifies these
men as victims, not perpetrators."
He concluded, "CSW therefore urges their immediate release, and calls on
the Egyptian authorities to focus instead on apprehending assailants
caught on camera as they attacked the Cathedral with stones and guns."
Christian Solidarity Worldwide works for religious freedom through advocacy and human rights, in the pursuit of justice.
For further information, visit www.csw.org.uk.
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