Muslim Mob Attacks Christians At
Church In Egypt, 25 Injured
By:
Mary Abdelmassih
Mar 13, 2010
At 17:00 hours
on Friday a Muslim mob attacked a Christian congregation during
prayers in the church attached to the services building of the
Coptic Church in the Rifeyah area of the Mediterranean seaport of
Mersa Matrouh. The mob, estimated to be between 2000-3000 of
Bedouins and fanatical Muslim Salafis, hurled stones at the
building. Four priests, the deacons and 400 parishioners were
trapped inside the building.
Rev. Matta Zakarya told activist Wagih Yacoub of Katiba-Tibeyah, an
advocacy group, that after the mob hurled stones at the building,
they went inside and assaulted the people, mostly families. Neither
the security forces nor the fire brigades were sufficient. Only two
fire brigades were available. Witnesses said the number of security
forces was not enough to contain the Muslims, and tear gas was used
against them.
The attack in casualties among the Copts and security forces, mostly
head injuries caused by hurled bricks. The injured were treated at
Matrouh Hospital. According to Rev. Matta, twenty-five persons were
seriously wounded, including women and children. Eighteen houses,
twenty-two shops and sixteen cars were destroyed and burnt down.
"Twenty-eight people have no homes and had to seek refuge in the
services building," said Rev. Matta.
Security forces enforcement from Alexandria arrived in the early
hours of Saturday, and escorted the 400 Copts held in the services
building to their homes.
The pretext used by the Muslims for this attack was the erection,
without permission, of a wall surrounding the plot of land acquired
by the Church adjacent to the services building. "The violence
started after the Muslim evening prayer," said Rev. Matta Zakaria to
Coptic News Bulletin, "when the Mosque's Imam, Shaikh Khamees,
talked of the need to fight the 'enemies', and said 'we don't want
Christians to live among us.'"
The mob moved on to other areas not protected by security,
vandalizing and torching Coptic homes, shops, businesses and cars in
the streets surrounding the services building. "They were chanting
religious and Jihadi slogans, during which they vandalized and burnt
houses and shops, amid the cries of the terrorized Copts," reported
Nader Shukry of Freecopts.
Copts whose relatives were held inside the services building,
gathered in front of the State Security in Matrouh to protest the
attacks on them and the delay in the arrival of the security forces
to protect them.
Rev. Matta said that a meeting is to be held in the morning of March
13, between the Church, the State Security and the Muslim elders in
the area, "Because the Copts are frightened, especially the women
and children who were indoors as the Muslims torched their homes and
who are now extremely traumatized. Everyone needs re-assurance that
such an attack will never happen again."
The services building, called Archangel Michael Charity, which
serves 300 Coptic families, was demolished (AINA 4-30-2009) by
security forces on April 26, 2009, under the pretext of questioning
the ownership of land, but the matter was later clarified and a
license for the construction of a replacement services building was
obtained from the Governor of Matrouh.