Egypt: Fourth Coptic Christian murdered in 10 days
Dr. Bassam Safwat Atta was called ‘the doctor of the poor’
By Dan Wooding, Founder of ASSIST News Service
UPPER EGYPT (ANS – January 21, 2017)
– A Coptic surgeon was found murdered in his flat on Friday, January
13, 2017, in Upper Egypt, making him the fourth Coptic Christian murder
victim in 10 days.
According to World Watch Monitor (https://www.worldwatchmonitor.org),
married father-of-two, Dr. Bassam Safwat Atta, 35, who lived in Dairut
City in Asyut Governorate, had a single gash in his neck and was lying
face down drenched in blood, according to a neighbor who found him.
The
neighbor, Mokhles Nageh, who forced entry into the flat at the request
of Dr. Atta’s wife, told World Watch Monitor that the doctor’s mobile
phone and keys were beside him on the ground, along with a blood-stained
knife.
Mr.
Nageh, who is also a Copt, added: “There wasn’t any sign of violent
struggle in the apartment. Everything was in its place and nothing was
missing, including money and Bassam’s wife’s jewellery.”
“A
cousin of the deceased, who did not wish to be named, said there were
40,000 Egyptian pounds (US $2,100) in the flat,” added World Watch
Monitor.
Other deadly incidents
Youssef
Lamei was murdered in Alexandria on January 3, 2017, by an alleged
“professional” killer after being threatened by Salafist Muslims.
Then
on January 6th, when Copts celebrate Christmas, a Coptic couple, Gamal
Sami, 60 and his wife, Nadia, 48, were found in bed, their throats
having been cut.
According
to Nadia Sami’s brother, no valuables had been taken from their home
and they had been killed because of their faith. Although the police are
keen not to label the incidents as sectarian and claimed the couple had
died in a robbery, Copts have been terrified by the nature of the
killings and believe the victims were singled out because of their
faith.
What happened on Friday?
Dr.
Atta’s cousin told World Watch Monitor that Dr. Atta’s wife, Nehal
Reda, a gynecologist, was not in Dairut last Friday because she was
working at a hospital in Manfalut City, some 21 miles away. Dr. Reda
asked their neighbor and Dr. Atta’s brother, Maqar, to knock on the door
of their flat after she had repeatedly tried to phone her husband. She
had also called a colleague at the private clinic where her husband was
due to be working that afternoon, and was told he had not seen him or
been able to reach him by phone.
One
of Dr. Atta’s colleagues at Dairut hospital, Dr. Michael Ramsey, told
World Watch Monitor: “On Friday evening at about 7pm I received a call
from one of my colleagues, telling me that Dr. Bassam had been killed
and was being taken to the hospital. I immediately headed there and when
I arrived in reception I saw his body, with a large wound to the front
of the neck.
“It
was a big shock -- Bassam was a very close friend. We lost a very good
man. He had a good relationship with everyone in the hospital. We learnt
from him gentleness and humility. He was called ‘the doctor of the
poor’ because he treated many poor people in his private clinic for
free. Everyone –Muslims and Christians alike – loved him. He always
sought to do good and he was well thought of by everyone.”
Mr.
Nageh suggested Dr. Atta had been the victim of a professional killer:
“This crime was meticulously planned and carried out by a professional
killer. He chose a suitable time to carry out his crime; he knew he was
alone in the apartment because his wife and two children were in
Manfalut City. Plus he knew what he was doing because he cut the vein in
Bassam’s neck like a professional.”
Nageh added that the lack of evidence of struggle or theft “indicates that the purpose of killing Bassam wasn’t robbery.”
World
Watch Monitor added that local priest Fr. Abraam Tharwat praised Dr.
Atta as “very kind and religious” and said he was also known as the
“doctor of the poor” in his home village of El-Kodeya, where he would
treat the needy in their homes for free.
“We lost a person dear to our hearts. We ask God to comfort his family and all of us,” he said.
Dr.
Atta’s body was transferred to the hospital morgue for a post-mortem on
Friday evening. His funeral was held in El-Kodeya the following day and
he was buried in the family cemetery.
Photo
captions: 1) Dr. Bassam Safwat Atta, 35, was found dead in his flat on
January 13, 2017 (World Watch Monitor). 2) Left to right: Gamal Sami,
60, his wife Nadia, 48, and Youssef Lamei. (Magdy Amin Girgis). 3) Dan
Wooding with Norm Nelson of Compassion Radio, at the Great Pyramid at
Giza, on the edge of Cairo.
About
the writer: Dan Wooding, 76, is an award-winning winning author,
broadcaster and journalist who was born in Nigeria, West Africa, of
British missionary parents, Alfred and Anne Wooding, who then 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
more than 53 years. They have two sons, Andrew and Peter, and six
grandchildren who all live in the UK. Dan is the founder/president of
the ASSIST News Service (ANS), and is also the author or co-author of
some 45 books. He has a weekly radio show and two TV programs all based
in Southern California, and has been a frequent visitor to Egypt and
filed many stories for ANS from there.
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