Standing
on the steps of a courthouse in the capital, some three dozen
demonstrators braved Egypt's draconian protest ban to hold signs aloft,
calling for their legal rights to be upheld in disputes between Muslims
and Christians.
"I
am an Egyptian citizen above all," said Michael Armanious, a Christian
demonstrator. "We pay taxes, we serve in the army, we are dealing with
all the same economic problems in Egypt with the rest of our countrymen,
why should we have fewer rights?" he said, flanked by roadblocks and
equal numbers of police, who forced the crowd to disperse after an hour.
Christians
make up some ten percent of Egypt's 91 million people. They sided
overwhelmingly with Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi when he overthrew an Islamist
president in 2013, paving his way to the presidency. But some have
recently voiced concerns that their lot has not improved under the
former general, despite his promises.
Interfaith
disputes are common in the countryside. Most often they arise over
mixed-faith love affairs or the building of churches. Many
confrontations result in violence perpetrated against Christians or
their property, and are resolved by extra-judicial councils of local
elders that favor the Muslim side.
The Christians demonstrating Saturday oppose such councils and are insisting such cases be brought to court.
Last
month, the leader of Egypt's Coptic Christian church warned of
increased attacks on Christians, saying national unity is being
"defaced." Pope Tawadros II told Egyptian lawmakers that since 2013
there have been 37 sectarian attacks on Christians — nearly an incident a
month.
The
comments came after a string of attacks hit the southern province of
Minya, home to a large Christian community but also a substantial
concentration of extremist Islamic groups. In July, a Muslim mob stabbed
a Christian to death over a personal feud, while days earlier, in two
separate incidents, mobs attacked and torched houses of Christians over a
rumor that they intended to convert buildings into churches. In May, a
Muslim mob stripped an elderly Christian woman and paraded her on the
street following a rumor that her son had an affair with a Muslim woman.
Lawmakers
say that parliament is currently drafting a new law to criminalize
actions that undermine national unity, as well as a law that eases
regulations over the construction of churches, which are severely
restricted.
A protester said, she want all Muslims fighting for their rights in countries like
U.S....and other nations to tell their Muslims countries to give rights
to other people of different faith to them.....Muslims and Islam wants
rights to their faith and yet the deny others their rights in Muslim and
Islam dominated nations....all Muslim and Islam leaders are hypocrites
and not Just in their reasoning.....
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