+ الرد على الموضوع
النتائج 1 إلى 2 من 2

الموضوع: U.S. Coptic Christians to Rally Against Persecution in Egypt


  1. #1
    إدارة عامة
    الحاله : admin is offline
    تاريخ التسجيل: April, 2006
    رقم العضوية: 1
    المشاركات: 832



    U.S. Coptic Christians to Rally Against Persecution in Egypt



    By Aaron J. Leichman|Christian Post Reporter
    Coptic Christians are planning to hold rallies in at least four U.S. cities Monday to express their “resentment and rejection” of the persecution that fellow believers are facing in Egypt.
    The rallies, organized by members of the The Free Copts, will be held in Chicago, Los Angeles, New York, and Washington at a time when Christians in Egypt are reportedly facing killings, destruction and looting of their property, deportation from their homes and the forced Islamization of their minor daughters.
    They also come as Coptic Christians increasingly accuse the Egyptian State Security and other security authorities of having a hand in all crimes taking place against the Copts in Egypt.
    “The Egyptian government facilitates attacks against Coptic Christians directly by destroying church properties, unlawfully detaining, raping and torturing converts to Christianity and failing to prosecute the Islamic extremists who attack Coptic Christians,” claim organizers of the rally Monday in front the United Nations building in New York.
    Citing the U.S. State Department’s 2009 report on religious freedom, the organizers say the Egyptian government has engaged in acts "which generally obviated the prosecution of perpetrators of crimes against Copts and precluded their recourse to the judicial system.”
    Furthermore, they added, there is a "failure to investigate and prosecute perpetrators.“
    "State security and police forces reportedly instigated a sectarian clash in... and the Government again failed to prosecute perpetrators of crimes against Copts," they noted.
    Last month, hundreds of angry Muslims, and by some accounts thousands, attacked Coptic Christians in a southern Egyptian town over an allegation that a Christian man kidnapped and raped a Muslim girl.
    The mob looted and burned at least 65 Christian-owned stores in Farshoot, about 300 miles south of Cairo, causing an estimated six million Egyptian pounds (over one million U.S. dollars) in damage, according to the Coptic American Friendship Association. Witnesses also reported that the mob made wooden crosses and burned them on the streets.
    Following the incident, authorities reportedly put pressure on the Coptic Church in Nag Hammadi, which is under the same governorate as Farshoot, to tell the victims to accept extrajudicial reconciliation and reopen their businesses without compensation. Police in Farshoot also reportedly refused to issue police reports to victims, forcing them to travel 37 miles away to make a report with the Attorney General in Qena, the capital of the governorate.
    The Christian community in Farshoot, however, said they will not be coerced into overlooking the mass riot and that they would unite to make authorities recognize what happened and punish perpetrators.
    “There will be no reconciliation before full financial compensation has been paid to the Coptic victims, and the criminals are brought to justice, so that safety and security can be restored to the district,” said Bishop Kirollos of the Nag Hammadi Diocese, according to the Assyrian International News Agency (AINA).
    In light of the recent incident and others like it, Coptic Christians in the United States are planning to let their voices be heard Monday, joining in rallies and marches across America.
    In New York, demonstrators plan to gather in front of the Egyptian Mission to the United Nations building and march towards the United Nations, where they expect to conclude the demonstration around 4 p.m.
    The rally in Chicago, meanwhile, is scheduled to start at noon in front of the Egyptian Consulate in Chicago.
    Although Egypt’s Christian population is small, making up eight to 12 percent of the overall population, it stands as the largest Christian community in the Middle East and is also among the oldest.
    Despite their sizeable number in Egypt, the Christian community in Egypt, known as Coptics, are marginalized in society and reportedly suffer from violent forms of abuse. They also lack fair representation in the government, leading to further abuse of the minority group.
    According to Egypt’s constitution, Islam is the “religion of the state” and the country's “principle source of legislation.”
    http://www.christianpost.com/article...vers-in-egypt/


    نقره لتكبير أو تصغير الصورة ونقرتين لعرض الصورة في صفحة مستقلة بحجمها الطبيعي
    رفعت عينيَ إلى الجبال من حيث يأتي عوني
رد مع اقتباس رد مع اقتباس  


  • #2
    إدارة عامة
    الحاله : admin is offline
    تاريخ التسجيل: April, 2006
    رقم العضوية: 1
    المشاركات: 832



    Press Release: American Copts Protest Anti-Christian Violence in
    Egypt
    *International Christian Concern *
    2020 Pennsylvania Ave. NW #941 • Washington DC 20006-1846
    www.persecution.org
    / Email: icc@persecution.org
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    CONTACT:
    Aidan Clay,
    Middle East Regional Manager,
    1-800-422-5441, icc@persecution.org
    *American Copts Protest Anti-Christian Sectarian Violence in Egypt*
    * *
    Washington, DC (December 14, 2009) – International Christian Concern (ICC)
    announces the commencement of three Coptic rallies to be held in several
    U.S. cities.

    American Coptic Christians have coordinated demonstrations to voice their
    concerns over the vast increase of sectarian violence toward Christian
    minorities in Egypt. The rallies will be held in New York and Chicago on
    December 14th, and Los Angeles on December 27th.

    Anti-Christian clashes have hit a boiling point in upper Egypt and in
    villages throughout the country. The Egyptian government has refused to
    intervene, leaving Copts defenseless at the hands of Muslim mobs. Egypt’s
    government has committed grave violations of human rights by failing to
    protect the Coptic minority and forcing the deportation of Copts from
    villages where anti-Christian attacks have occurred. The government has
    also ignored the abduction and incarceration of Coptic women by Muslim men,
    an overt abuse on women which directly corresponds with the UN’s definition
    of human trafficking.

    Aidan Clay, ICC Regional Manager for the Middle East, said “*These rallies
    will bring awareness to the flagrant rise of persecution against the Coptic
    Christian minority under Islamic-based coercion. ICC backs the American
    Coptic community in condemning the Egyptian government for deliberately
    allowing human rights abuses toward Christians to continue without penalty*.
    *We encourage Christians in New York, Chicago and Los Angeles to join the
    rallies in support of fellow Christians who are suffering in Egypt*.”

    Please visit Free Copts online for more information. (
    http://freecopts.net/english/
    )

    # # #

    *You are free to disseminate this news story. We request that you reference
    ICC (International Christian Concern) and include our web address,
    www.persecution.org.
    ICC is a Washington-DC based human rights organization that exists to help
    persecuted Christians worldwide. ICC provides Awareness, Advocacy, and
    Assistance to the worldwide persecuted Church. For additional information
    or for an interview, contact ICC at 800-422-5441.*


    http://www.persecution.org/suffering...13118eb48f8613


    نقره لتكبير أو تصغير الصورة ونقرتين لعرض الصورة في صفحة مستقلة بحجمها الطبيعي
    رفعت عينيَ إلى الجبال من حيث يأتي عوني

  • + الرد على الموضوع

    معلومات الموضوع

    الأعضاء الذين يشاهدون هذا الموضوع

    الذين يشاهدون الموضوع الآن: 1 (0 من الأعضاء و 1 زائر)

       

    مواقع النشر (المفضلة)

    مواقع النشر (المفضلة)

    ضوابط المشاركة

    • لا تستطيع إضافة مواضيع جديدة
    • لا تستطيع الرد على المواضيع
    • لا تستطيع إرفاق ملفات
    • لا تستطيع تعديل مشاركاتك