Coptic Bishop: Egypt ‘diseased’ with discrimination
By Dan Wooding, Founder of ASSIST News Service
EGYPT (ANS – July 18, 2016)
-- An Egyptian bishop has called for an end to discrimination against
the country’s Christians, urging the government to do more to control
the situation in villages across the country.
“We
have to recognise everyone in Egypt as citizens of equal rights and
obligations,” said Bishop Makarius in an Arabic interview to Christian
website Copts United on July 7.
The
bishop’s statements, translated to English by World Watch Monitor,
indicate the church is unhappy that attacks continue without legal
redress.
Six
weeks ago, Bishop Makarius won the praise of many Copts by standing out
against extrajudicial “conciliation sessions”, whose judgments
Christians often are pressured into accepting, to settle claims outside
courts.
World
Watch Monitor said that describing discrimination as a disease
afflicting his country, Makarius said “marginalising Copts incapacitates
part of the Egyptian body.”
The
news service went on to say that since May, Copts have suffered at
least two mob attacks. On May 20, a Copt grandmother was stripped naked
while Christian homes were attacked after a rumoured affair between a
Christian and a Muslim. Reports of another Christian turning his home
into a church prompted thousands of angry Muslims to go on the offensive
in a village off Alexandria on June 17.
The
May attack, as well one on June 29, took place in Makarius’s diocese of
Minya, whose main city lies 250 kilometres south of Cairo. Elsewhere, a
Coptic priest was killed in Sinai on 30 June. The attack was claimed by
the ‘Islamic State’, which termed the Christian minister “an infidel
fighter”. In other parts of the country, a priest’s daughter survived a
neck stab on 2 July, a nun died of a “stray” bullet on the
Cairo-Alexandria motorway on 5 July, and a fire broke out in a Christian
kindergarten on 9 July.
The
outspoken bishop was quoted by Catholic Agenzia Fides on 10 July saying
the pace of attacks in recent weeks has increased to one every 10 days.
In
his Copts United interview, Makarius called for a country welcoming
every Egyptian. “Anyone, Muslim, Christian, Jewish or Baha’i should be a
welcome addition to this country. Anyone, regardless of their belief,
can be a benefit to this country,” he said.
World
Watch Monitor continued by saying, that the Copts’ list of grievances
include restrictions against church construction, and exclusion from
employment. Thought to be 10% of Egypt’s population, the country’s
estimated 9 million Christians have long complained of unequal
opportunities when it comes to senior and mid-level state jobs,
including in the army, the police force, the judiciary, the diplomatic
corps, and education.
“Everyone
ought to have an equal chance to jobs,” the bishop said during the
interview. “Among other illnesses, Egypt is diseased with
discrimination.”
A call to government
“I
wish the government presence is better felt on village level,” Makarius
said, describing most, if not all villages within his diocese, as under
the sway of different powers that may not always work in the best
national interest.
In
recent years, several villages and towns have seen attacks against
Copts, often flaring at the slightest perceived provocation.
Anyone, Muslim, Christian, Jewish or Baha’i should be a welcome addition to this country
Turning
to another sore spot on the country’s penal code, Makarius called for
reforming Article 98 of Egypt’s constitution, which concerns “defamation
of religion“ and, he said, mainly targets Christians.
“We
could accept the current article, no matter how harsh, were it applied
even-handedly. But it seems to only apply to Christians,” Makarius said,
complaining that numerous instances of contempt of Christianity have
gone with impunity.
“The
[Egyptian] constitution contradicts itself. Some articles stress
freedom of expression, while expressing a contrary opinion against
[Islamic] religion is quickly judged as defamation,” the bishop said.
World
Watch Monitor concluded by saying, “The Egyptian Initiative for
Personal Rights has documented scores of cases of blasphemy since 2011.
Civil rights lawyer Hamdi al-Assyouti estimates that 90 percent of
blasphemy charges are filed against Christians.”
For more information, please go to https://www.worldwatchmonitor.org.
Photo:
1) Bishop Makarius. 2) St. George's Coptic Church in Sohag City, Egypt,
after arsonists set it ablaze. 3) Norma and Dan Wooding.
About
the writer: Dan Wooding, 75, is an award-winning winning author,
broadcaster and journalist who was born in Nigeria of British missionary
parents, Alfred and Anne Wooding, who worked with the Sudan Interior
Mission, now known as SIM. He now lives in Southern California with his
wife Norma, to whom he has been married for some 53 years. They have two
sons, Andrew and Peter, and six grandchildren who all live in the UK.
Dan is the founder and international director of the ASSIST News Service
(ANS), and is also the author of some 45 books. In addition, he has a
radio program and two TV shows all based in Southern California.
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