Donna Danna (15 Apr 2006)
"ONE PERSON KILLED; SEVERAL OTHERS INJURED IN 3 GOOD FRIDAY CHURCH ATTACKS IN EGYPT"


Friday, April 14, 2006

ONE PERSON KILLED; SEVERAL OTHERS INJURED IN GOOD FRIDAY CHURCH ATTACKS IN EGYPT
http://www.assistnews.net/Stories/s06040047.htm
 
By Dan Wooding
Founder of ASSIST Ministries 
 
ALEXANDRIA, EGYPT (ANS) -- Following knife attacks at three CopticChurches on Good Friday in the city of Alexandria, the country’s Coptic Christians have protested in the city to demand greater protection.
 

According to the BBC, hundreds rallied with banners reading: “Stop the persecution of Copts.”
 

“One person was killed and several others injured in the attacks on Good Friday Masses,” said the BBC story.
 

The BBC reported that the interior ministry said the assaults had been carried out by one “deranged” man but earlier police reports talked of three simultaneous attacks.
 

Christians make up 10% of the Egyptian population and have long complained of harassment and discrimination.
 

Egypt's opposition Muslim Brotherhood endorsed the Christians' protest, calling the incident very sad news.
 

The BBC went on to say, “The interior ministry named the assailant as Mahmoud Salah-Eddin Abdel-Raziq, 25, and said he was ‘psychologically disturbed.’ It said the man attacked two churches and was arrested as he tried to enter a third.”
 

But police told the AP news agency that three men had been detained in simultaneous incidents and that an attempt to attack a fourth church had been foiled.
 

The ministry said five people had been injured, the police as many as 16.

About 600 Copts protested outside one of the churches attacked - Saints Church - holding banners with slogans such as “Until when?” and “Hosni Mubarak, where are you?” referring to the nation's president.
 

One woman worshipper, Nadia Lofti, was reported by the BBC as saying: “We cannot enter their mosques and kill them, yet they can come to our churches and kill us. Where are the police and the government?”
 

Some Copts argue that previous attacks on them have gone unpunished or have drawn light sentences.
 

Witnesses said the churches only had one guard each on Good Friday.
 

A doctor told AP that one policeman refused to fire on an attacker, saying he did not have orders.
 

The Muslim Brotherhood sympathized with the Copts' protest. Senior official Saber Abou el-Fotooh said: “The interior ministry's resources are stretched thin because it is preoccupied with chasing the Muslim Brotherhood.”
 

The US condemned the attacks. State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said they were “unacceptable” and urged the government to try to defuse the situation.
 

The BBC story concluded: “Most Christians in Egypt are Copts - Christians descended from the ancient Egyptians. Their church split from the Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches in 451AD because of a theological dispute over the nature of Christ, but is now, on most issues, doctrinally similar to the Eastern Orthodox Church.”

Coptic Christians Attacked In Churches

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;jsessionid=YLKBCXGSQLGKPQFIQMGSFF4AVCBQWIV0?xml=/news/2006/04/15/wegypt15.xml&sSheet=/news/2006/04/15/ixworld.html
 
 

Egypt Church Attacks Spark Anger
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4911346.stm
 
Worshippers Attacked In Egyptian Coptic Churches
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/africa/article357766.ece