By Jeremy Reynalds
Senior Correspondent for ASSIST News Service
MINYA, EGYPT
(ANS) -- Khamis had no other choice than
to leave his house in the village of Dalga, near the central Egyptian
city of Minya. After an arson attack on his cousin's house and the fatal
shooting of another relative, he fled into hiding with his wife and six
children.
According to a story by Ahmed
Maher for the BBC, Khamis said they had been singled out for no other
reason than being Christians.
"It
was a terrible night," recalled Khamis (not his real name) who agreed
to talk to the BBC, but did not want to be identified.
Khamis recounted what happened on the night of July 3, when the army deposed Islamist former President Mohammed Morsi.
The
BBC reported he said, "Angry mobs and thugs rampaged through houses
owned by Christians. They started with the house of my cousin, looting
and setting it on fire. We weren't taking any chances - we fled the
village."
The BBC said since Morsi was forced from office, there has been a string of attacks on Christians in different provinces.
According
to the BBC, local Copts say they have been singled out by radical
Islamists, for campaigning against the former president and his Muslim
Brotherhood movement.
On July 6, a priest was shot dead by gunmen in an outdoor market in northern Sinai.
Five
days later, the BBC said
, the body of a beheaded Christian man was found in the same area, where
Islamist militants have launched a string of attacks on security and
military posts since Morsi's overthrow.
Arson
attacks on Christian houses and shops have also been reported in remote
southern villages, where Islamist hardliners hold sway.
The violence included a church in Dalga, 220 miles south of Cairo.
The BBC visited the site and found a burned-out shell, ransacked and blackened by fire.
Father Ayoub Youssef said Muslim neighbors helped him escape during the attack on his church.
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"They
were many people, about 500," he said. "They stormed the church
chanting slogans accusing Christians of campaigning against Morsi like
'Shame on you Christians! You traitors conspired against the president.
You are doomed!'"
The BBC said
he added, "They looted everything - benches, ceiling fans, windows and
even toilets. They smashed a statue of the Virgin Mary, before setting
the whole building on fire."
Father Ayoub was grateful to Muslim neighbors for saving his life.
"They
helped me escape from the roof to their house. Had it not been for
them, I would have been lynched," the BBC reported he said.
Egypt's Christian minority, estimated at around 10 percent of the 85 million population, has felt vulnerable for decades.
For
a long time they steered clear of politics. However, the BBC reported,
with the recent dramatic changes to the political scene, they have
become more active.
The new Coptic Pope, Tawadros
II, openly criticized the ousted president, calling him a divisive
figure who had set Egyptians against one another.
The
BBC said he blessed the president's removal and was in attendance when
General Abdul Fattah al-Sisi, the defense minister, announced Mr Morsi's
removal from office.
Father
Ayoub said being politically active or associated with opponents of the
former president was not an excuse to take innocent lives.
"If
you are attacked because of your political affiliations, I really don't
know what the world is coming to," the BBC reported he said.
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