Case Dropped against Christians Arrested for Evangelizing in Alexandria, Egypt
By Jeremy Reynalds, Senior Correspondent, ASSIST News Service (jeremyreynalds@gmail.com )
ISTANBUL, TURKEY (ANS - Feb.28, 2016)
-- A regional prosecuting attorney in Egypt has dismissed a case
against three Christians arrested last summer and accused of blasphemy
during an evangelistic outreach, their attorney said.
According
to a story by Jeff M. Sellers, Editor of Morning Star News, the three
Christians, one of them a minor, were being investigated pending
possible charges of “showing disdain” to a “heavenly religion” under a
statute that in every way but its official title constitutes a blasphemy
law.
The
attorney general of Alexandria, Chancellor Saeed Abd Al-Mohseen,
dismissed the case on Feb. 2, but the ruling was not officially issued
until Feb. 24.
The
prosecutor dismissed the case after an appeal by Hamdi Al-Assuity,
attorney for the three Christians arrested on July 11, 2015 in the port
of city of Alexandria.
“After
the appeal, the case was sent to the general prosecutor in Cairo, who
sent it back to the attorney general in Alexandria, who closed the case
for the lack of evidence,” Al-Assuity told Morning Star News.
During
the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, Fawzy Osama Ibrahim, 16, a
first-year high school student, was arrested for handing out small bags
of dates to passersby on the streets of Alexandria.
In
addition to the dates, a snack Muslims commonly eat when breaking
Ramadan’s daytime fast, the bags contained a statement about God’s love
and His omniscient nature.
“The
Lord knows all that occurs, for He is the mighty knower,” the message
read. “He can carry on His shoulders all that is oppressive and
exhausting and bring comfort and joy, for He loves you very much.”
The bags also carried the name of an Arabic-language website about Jesus and the Christian faith.
According
to Morning Star News, the outreach offended a Salafi Muslim who
forcibly detained the teenager and took him to a police station,
according to Al-Assuity.
Later
in the evening, Ibrahim called a friend, Stephen Boutros Fayed, 21.
Fayed and another friend, Shady Saeed, 20, went to the police station
where Ibrahim was being held, and they were promptly arrested.
Despite
there being no evidence that the three were handing out dates together,
Morning Star News reported police held all three in jail.
Two
days later, on July 13, the three Christians were released on a 10,000
Egyptian pound (US$1,280) bond, awaiting further investigation by the
attorney general’s office.
Immediately
after his release, Fayed said on his Facebook page the arrest was
unjust. “If someone had been caught with hashish or was drinking alcohol
on the street,” he wrote, “it would have been easier for them than
everything we’ve gone through.”
Article
98F of Egypt’s Penal Code, while not strictly a blasphemy statute,
prohibits acts that show disdain or contempt for “any of the heavenly
religions or the sects belonging thereto.”
A
violation is punishable by detention for a period of not less than six
months and not exceeding five years, or paying a fine of not less than
500 Egyptian pounds and not exceeding 1,000 Egyptian pounds.
Blasphemy
cases have been on the rise since President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi was
sworn into office in 2014, according to the Egyptian Initiative for
Personal Rights (EIPR).
Morning
Star News said the blasphemy cases disproportionately target
Christians, but other religious minorities, such as Shia Muslims and
Baha’i, have also been charged with actions against a “heavenly
religion.”
Mina
Thabet, program manager at the Egyptian Commission for Rights and
Freedoms (ECRF), said that despite Sisi’s fight to end the influence of
the Muslim Brotherhood and other hard-line Islamic groups in Egypt, Sisi
is religiously conservative and much of the discrimination against
Copts under former presidents Hosni Mubarak and Mohamed Morsi continues.
“The
same restrictions on freedom of religion and belief exist, including
the right to build churches, and impunity for sectarian violence
perpetrators is still going on,” Morning Star News reported Thabet said.
The
constitution protects freedom of speech, which should include religious
expression, but Al-Assuity said this right more often than not is
trumped by politics.
“In
Egypt there is no political will to put the articles from the
constitution that guarantee freedom of expression and belief in effect
the right way,” Al-Assuity said. “These constitutional articles make
Article 98F from the criminal code unconstitutional.”
To lean more about Morning Star News, visit http://morningstarnews.org/
Photo
captions: 1) Scripture passage and dates taken as evidence in case
against three Christians. (Morning Star News). 2) Coptic Christians in
Egypt. 3) Jeremy and Elma Reynalds.
About the writer: Jeremy
Reynalds is Senior Correspondent for the ASSIST News Service, a
freelance writer and also the founder and CEO of Joy Junction, New
Mexico's largest emergency homeless shelter, www.joyjunction.org.
He has a master's degree in communication from the University of New
Mexico, and a Ph.D. in intercultural education from Biola University in
Los Angeles. His newest book is "From Destitute to Ph.D." Additional
details on "From Destitute to Ph.D." are available at www.myhomelessjourney.com. Reynalds lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico with his wife, Elma. For more information contact: Jeremy Reynalds at jerenyreynalds@gmail.com .
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Note: If you would like to help support the ASSIST News Service, please go to www.assistnews.net and click on the DONATE button to make your tax-deductible gift (in the US), which will help us continue to bring you these important stories. If you prefer a check, please make it out to ASSIST and mail it to: PO Box 609, Lake Forest, CA 92609, USA. Thank you.
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