Saudis arrest Christian for entering Mecca

World News, Coptic News, General No Comments

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By MICHAEL FREUND

Saudi officials have arrested a man in Mecca for being a Christian, saying that the city, which Muslims consider to be holy, is off-limits to non-Muslims.

Nirosh Kamanda, a Sri Lankan Christian, was detained by the Saudi Expatriates Monitoring Committee last week after he started to sell goods outside Mecca’s Great Mosque.

After running his fingerprints through a new security system, Saudi police discovered that he was a Christian who had arrived in the country six months earlier to take a job as a truck driver in the city of Dammam. Kamanda had subsequently left his place of work and moved to Mecca.
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Egypt resists UNILO report accusations on Copts

Egptian News No Comments

Cairo - Egypt on Wednesday protested an International Labour Organisation (ILO) report accusing the Muslim-dominated state of discriminating against the Coptic Christian labour force (Copts), newspaper reports said.
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Egypt: keeping the Copts subjugated

Selected Artilces, Coptic News No Comments

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Written by Elizabeth Kendal, World Evangelical Alliance Religious Liberty Commission (WEA RLC), ANS  

Security increasingly tenuous for Egypt’s indigenous Coptic Christians

AUSTRALIA (ANS) – On 11 May, Muslims in the village of Bimha (or Bamha) in Ayat district (around 70 kilometres south Cairo) left their mosques after Friday prayers, armed and zealous for jihad against the indigenous Coptic Christian community and their solitary, partially built church.

The violent Muslim pogrom in Bimha bears the same features of other anti-Christian pogroms of the past decade. These familiar elements indicate that the security situation for Egypt’s indigenous Copts (who are Christian) is growing increasingly tenuous. For every time violence is rewarded with impunity it is emboldened.
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North Africa “Underground” Christians And Missionaries Face Death Threats

Egptian News, Coptic News No Comments

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By BosNewsLife News Center

CAIRO, EGYPT (BosNewsLife) — Hundreds of indigenous missionaries and other believers in North Africa’s expanding underground churches are “constantly in danger of persecution, imprisonment, and death,” amid Muslim extremism in the region, a mission group said Friday, May 25.

Christian Aid Mission (CAM), which supports indigenous missionaries in the region, made the announcement after learning that a woman, identified as Fatima, was nearly killed by her husband, Salam, after he discovered she was a Christian.

“Fatima refused his demands to renounce Christ and follow Islamic rituals of praying and fasting. Salam stabbed her in the chest, and if neighbors had not intervened, he would have cut her hand off,” CAM told BosNewsLife in a statement.
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If I Were a Copt !!

General No Comments

By Tarek Heggy

If I were a Copt I would have split the skies of Egypt and the world with the sound of my voice decrying the oppressive climate in which Egypt’s Copts are living today.
 If I were a Copt I would have let the world know of the inequity that has plagued the lives of many Copts since 1952 and kept them from occupying the political and senior administrative posts they deserve.
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Egypt: Coptic Christians Call for End of Religious Persecution

Egptian News, Coptic News, General No Comments

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By Dan Wooding
Founder of ASSIST Ministries
CAIRO, EGYPT (ANS) – A global coalition of Coptic Christians is calling on governments of the world to demand that Egypt stop religious persecution of Coptic Christians and guarantee religious freedom and justice for all citizens.

For nearly four decades, the Coptic Christians in Egypt have been targeted by a wave of brutal attacks on their persons, churches, homes and businesses, the Catholic News Agency reports.

The Ibn Khaldoun Research Center has documented over 120 major attacks on the Copts during this period,” said the Catholic News Agency story. “Another study estimated that over 4,000 Copts were killed or injured in this period. They have also suffered material losses in the tens of millions of dollars.

“The researchers noted that many of these attacks took place on Fridays, after the Muslim prayers in mosques. As well, the vast majority of these attacks were not committed by organized terrorist groups, but by ordinary people from the neighborhood.”
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Michael Meunier Testimony Congressional Human Rights Caucus

Coptic News No Comments

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Thank you, Mr. Chairman and Members of Congress, and good afternoon. My name is Michael Meunier, and I am pleased to testify on behalf of the U.S. Copts Association regarding human rights and religious freedom abuses against Egypt’s Coptic and other minorities. I will begin with a review of some recent human and civil rights abuses against Copts and Bahai’s, and move on to offer some policy recommendations for U.S. lawmakers.

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US Congress: Briefing on Religious Freedom in Egypt

Egptian News, World News, General No Comments

Nina Shea, Vice Chair of the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom has recently presented a Briefing on “Religious Freedom in Egypt: Recent Developments” before the Task Force on Religious Freedom Of the United States House of Representatives. The Commission’s Annual Report was published on 2 May 2007. The section on Egypt is on pages 203-211 of the report. The testimony was presented by Ms. Shea on 23 May 2007.

As the briefing went into great details in describing the violations of religious freedoms of the various minorities in Egypt, and because of the known focus of this blog, this post will point mainly to the sections of the briefing where it mentioned the crisis currently facing the Baha’is of Egypt.

In the introductory paragraphs it states: “…These violations include continued prosecution in state security courts and imprisonment of those accused of “unorthodox” Islamic religious beliefs or practices, including those who are not militants; discrimination against, restrictions on, interference with, and harassment and surveillance of members of non-Muslim religious minorities, particularly Christians and Baha’is, by the Egyptian state security services….”

Later on it states: “…Under the Emergency Law, the security forces are given license to mistreat and torture prisoners, arbitrarily arrest and detain persons, hold detainees in prolonged pretrial detention, and occasionally engage in mass arrests. Thousands of persons have been detained without charge on suspicion of illegal terrorist or political activity; others are serving sentences after being convicted on similar charges. Non-Muslim religious minorities, particularly Christians and Baha’is, report discrimination, interference, harassment, and surveillance by these same state security services.”
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U.S. Copts Association President, Michael Meunier, to testify in Congress.

Coptic News No Comments

57287_101718441b1.jpgPRESS RELEASE                                          Contact: copts@copts.com

 Washington, D.C. (05/22/07)- As part of its continuous efforts to realize change on behalf of the Copts of Egypt, U.S. Copts Association president, Michael Meunier, will testify in the congressional briefing held by the Congressional Human Rights Caucus and its Task Force for International Religious Freedom. Mr. Meunier is expected to address recent religious freedom developments in Egypt and its implications as well as offer recommendations for U.S. foreign policy.                  
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Anba Pimen talks

General No Comments

137331.jpgBy Nader Shukry

Following the Uleiqat incident, Watani talked to Anba Pimen, bishop of Naqada and Quos.

Watani: To begin with, how many Copts are there in Naj al-Uleiqat?
Anba Pimen: Uleiqat is home to 100 Coptic families, [families in rural Egypt are extended ones; a family may compromise some 20 or 30 members] and there are some 30 other families who live in nearby hamlets and whom we serve along with those of Uleiqat. This makes the total number of families 130. There is no church, only a small mud brick house or guest house in which gatherings and celebrations are held. Holy Mass is conducted using a mobile altar, and Sunday schools are held every week.
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