A rewrite of many articles we read, plus our own input of the truth
By Wahid, Laila, Nader and Sameh Wahba
Special to ASSIST News Service
ATLANTA, GA
(ANS) -- On June 30, 2012, democratically
elected Mohamed Morsi won the election by a razor thin margin of 50.7%
of the vote, took the oath, and was sworn in as president of Egypt.
President Morsi before he was deposed
|
Nationwide protests erupt as a
result of this decree and 1.5 million Egyptians organize a sit-in at
the Itihadeya, where the presidential palace stands and peacefully
request he rescind his presidential decrees.
Some of Morsi's hard line Muslim Brotherhood supporters attacked
the peaceful sit-in outside Itihadeya with guns and shot five peaceful
protesters dead.
A few weeks later,
demonstrators of the Muslim Brotherhood surrounded the Supreme Court,
preventing the justices from convening so as to prevent any judicial
review of the president's decisions. Instead of protecting the
judiciary, Morsi dissolves the Supreme Court and labels its members all
"traitors to Egypt."
One week later, Morsi fires
the Egyptian Attorney General and personally appoints a Moslem
Brotherhood Attorney to replace him without going through the
Constitutional due process.
A huge crowd in Cairo
|
Within a month, he invites top
global terrorists, known jihadists and al-Qaeda members, from all over
the world, to a rally in Rabaa Adaweya, a four-cornered street that has a
mosque.
Throughout this whole time,
the Egyptian economy is sinking, the stock market collapses, foreign
investment has dwindled, tourism has died, and electricity, fuel, and
water shortages are a daily turmoil.
Unemployment has almost doubled, and the Egyptian pound has lost over 20 percent of its value globally.
Oh, and President Morsi also outlines his new plans to lease the
Sinai to Hamas, the well-known terrorist group (with full administrative
control).
With only 0.7% majority, democratically elected President Morsi has done all the above in his FIRST YEAR IN OFFICE!!!
Anti Morsi protestors
|
Instead of listening to the
people, President Morsi goes on TV during prime time hours and threatens
the nation with veiled and not-so-veiled threats.
To protect the 30 million
Egyptians, the Minister of Defense, General Abdel Fattah el Sisi and
other top Egyptian leaders ask Morsi to step down, and because
Parliament was dissolved earlier this year due to the
unconstitutionality of its election, the country is turned over to the
chief justice of the Supreme Court.
"Democratically" elected President Morsi, was fired by the 30 million Egyptians who protested.
Well, in response to this,
100,000 Muslim Brotherhood and pro Morsi protestors, decided to camp for
six weeks on vital streets allowing no traffic to go through, making
the already congested Cairo traffic intolerable. People could not access
their homes without being harassed and body searched and could not get
to shops or work.
Standing by their man: Supporters of ousted president Mohamed Morsi protest in Cairo
(Photo: EPA) |
The military started asking
the pro Morsi protestors to leave peacefully, throwing Egyptian flags
from military choppers, throwing tracts asking them to leave peacefully,
giving them a deadline. But all the time, the Muslim Brotherhood and
pro Morsi protestors, built more barricades, brought in more weapons and
artillery and transformed Rabaa Al Adaweya and Al Nahda into a war
zone.
Bloodshed is never a good solution, because violence breeds
violence, but the Muslim Brotherhood had been warned and given
deadlines.
A protestor throws a tear gas
canister
back at the military |
On the other hand, thousands of
sit-in protestors were given the option to leave peacefully, which they
did and it was majestic to see the self-control exerted by the Egyptian
security forces. It is hard to understand how other countries have the
nerve to say that Egypt doesn't have the right to stop dangerous
demonstrations that are loaded with weapons and criminals? Is Egypt
supposed to leave a group of people to kill and terrorize others and say
that this is their so-called right for freedom of speech? How about our
right for freedom of walking safely on the streets, and living
normally? Since when is freedom a license to harms others?
The vast majority of Muslims just want to live in peace. Although
this may be true, it is entirely irrelevant. The fact is that the
Muslim Brotherhood ruled Egypt at this point in history; it is the
Muslim Brotherhood who marched, the Muslim Brotherhood who waged wars.
It is the Muslim Brotherhood
who systematically slaughters Christians, burn churches, monasteries,
Christian organizations and Christian schools. It is the Muslim
Brotherhood who bomb, behead and murder, anyone who disagrees with them
or with their explanation of Islam. It is the Muslim Brotherhood who
takes over mosque after mosque. It is the Muslim Brotherhood who teaches
their young to kill and used them as human shields during the Rabaa Al
Adaweya sit-in. It is the Muslim Brotherhood who, even though say a
woman's place is at home, used their women as human shields during the
sit-ins.
Dear friends living around
the world please don't believe all what the global media says. We have
been living in this country our whole lives. We have gone through the
whole phase of Morsi's regime and have witnessed first-hand what his
supporters have done and are capable of doing. The people of Egypt have
spoken; we do not want terrorists to rule this country. We do not want
them to terrorize any of our people again.
The writers are leaders in the
Christian community in Cairo. However, they are now in Atlanta due to
the troubles. In addition to working with Saddleback on publishing
Purpose Driven materials in Arabic, they also work with Walk Thru the
Bible. They have their own organization called Middle East Leadership
Training Institute (MELTI) (http://pc-egypt.org/rbta/en/?p=277 )
and their Mission Statement is: Affecting Life Change - Where changing
lives through God's Word is our focus, not just the teaching the
material.
See all ASSIST News articles at www.assistnews.net
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar