Another Copt Killed as Alleged
Shooters Plead Not Guilty in Egypt
Source: Compass Direct News News - Charisma
Feb 18, 2010
Three men
accused of killing six Coptic worshipers and a security guard
pleaded not guilty on Saturday as the Coptic community mourned the
loss of yet another victim of apparent anti-Christian violence.
The three men allegedly sprayed a crowd with gunfire after a
Christmas service in Nag Hammadi, Egypt, on Jan. 6. In addition to
the seven that were killed, nine others were wounded. The killings
were the worst act of anti-Coptic violence since January 2000, when
20 Copts were killed in sectarian fighting in Al-Kosheh.
Defendants Mohammed al-Kammuni, Qorshi Abul Haggag and Hendawi
Sayyed appeared Saturday in an emergency security court in Qena, a
city 39 miles north of Luxor.
In front of the packed courtroom, the three men said little at the
hearing other than to enter their plea before Judge Mohammed Adul
Magd, according to one attorney present at the hearing. The men are
charged with premeditated murder, public endangerment and damaging
property.
Numerous Muslim attorneys volunteered to defend them for free as
seven attorneys representing the interests of the victims looked on.
The next hearing is set for March 20.
Even as the men entered their pleas, the Coptic community mourned
the loss of yet another Christian, this one shot dead by police. On
the evening of Feb. 9, Malak Saad, a 25-year-old Coptic carpenter
living in Teta in Menoufia Province, was walking outside a meeting
hall that police had seized from Christians when he was shot through
his chest at close range. He died instantly.
Scant details are known about the shooting. Police surrounded the
entire village and closed it to all reporters. In a statement,
officials at the Interior Ministry said the Saad was killed by
mistake when a bullet discharged while a police guard was cleaning
his weapon. The Interior Ministry said the shooter has been detained
and will be tried in a military court. Such courts are traditionally
closed to the public.
One of Saad's cousins, who requested anonymity, disputed the
Interior Ministry's version of the incident. He said that the guard
had used the bathroom inside the meeting hall and had come outside
of the building when he exchanged a few words with Saad and shot him
at close range. The bullet went completely through Saad's chest.
The building in question had been Coptic-owned for 16 years, but two
days prior to the shooting, police seized it after a group of
Muslims started a rumor that the owners planned to convert the hall
into a church building.
Disputes over worship venues are common in Egypt. Copts and other
Christians are extremely restricted in opening or even maintaining
houses of worship because of complex government statutes.
Anti-Christian elements within Egyptian society often use the
statutes to harass Christians, Christian leaders said.
Christians Arrested
Following the Jan. 6 shootings, in a move that Christian leaders
said was designed to silence the Coptic community's protests, police
began going door to door and arresting Coptic men in their late
teens and 20s. Reports vary widely on the numbers of how many men
were arrested, but 15 arrests have been confirmed.
Early in the morning of Jan. 8, officers from State Security
Intelligence appeared at the home of Tanios Samuel looking for a
different house. When officers realized they were at the wrong home,
they arrested his brothers, Fady Milad Samuel, 21, and Wael Milad
Samuel, 24.
"We are Copts. It is their country, they will do whatever they
want," Tanios Samuel said about the arrests.
He said the government is using his brothers and the others arrested
as pawns to silence dissent. He said he lives in fear for himself
and his brothers.
"The families are very scared - scared of violence, getting threats
all the time," Samuel said. "All we want is peace."
Last month's attack brought widespread outrage across the Coptic
community and from human rights groups around the world.
Since his rise to power in 1981, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak
has avoided classifying any anti-Coptic attack as part of a larger
sectarian struggle within the country. His critics however, have
long said his policies or lack thereof contribute greatly to the
anti-Christian climate within the country.
Although freedom of religion is guaranteed in Egypt's constitution,
Islam is the official state religion. In public schools, the Quran
is used to teach Arabic.
On Jan. 21, Mubarak made an uncharacteristically strong statement
about the shootings to MENA, the government-run news agency.
"The criminal act in Nag Hammadi has bled the hearts of Egyptians,"
he said. "I hasten to affirm that the reasonable people of this
nation, and its religious leaders and thinkers ... bear the greater
responsibility to contain discord and ignorance and blind fanaticism
and to confront the despicable sectarian strife that threatens the
unity of our society."
Despite Mubaraks's comments, the government has characterized the
attack as either a random criminal act or as one done in reaction to
a November incident in which a 21-year-old Christian man allegedly
raped a 12-year-old Muslim girl.
In an interview with BBC Arabic, Dr. Fathi Sourour, head of the
Egyptian Parliament, said, "The Nag Hammadi shooting of Christians
on Christmas Eve was a single criminal act, with no sectarian
dimensions." He added that the crime was "prompted by the ‘death' of
a Muslim girl as a result of being raped by a Copt."
Later, commenting on a report about the incident, he described the
shootings as "a clash between two brothers living in one home."
Copts, however, have a starkly different impression of the shooting.
Georgette Qillini, a Coptic member of the Egyptian Parliament,
described the attack as "a purely sectarian crime and by no means an
individual criminal attack," the Egyptian newspaper Al-Ahram
reported.
Ibtessam Habib, another Coptic Parliament member, agreed that
"sectarian rather than personal motives lie behind the Nag Hammadi
attack."