Rome, 12 April 2013
Following the deadliest
sectarian violence seen in months, the Coptic Pope, Tawadros II, has
publically decried the record of President Morsi and his Egyptian
government for failing to safeguard Christian communities from
repeated hate attacks.
Tawadros II comments came
after two incidents in Cairo saw at least five Christians murdered
and up to a hundred injured. Funeral mourners at St Mark's Coptic
Cathedral were set upon as they tried to leave the Church grounds,
attacked with weapons ranging from stones to molotov cocktails and
automatic firearms. It took security forces five hours to arrive on
the scene, and only after the bloodshed had occurred.
The public rebuke from
Tawadros II, the first directly attacking President Morsi,
demonstrates the despair with the lack of political will, domestic
and international, to recognise the gravity of these repeated
persecutions and to take the necessary steps to safeguard Christian
communities. Instead, the ruling Muslim Brotherhood has demonstrated
a casual indifference towards the plight of the 8 million citizens
that make up the Christian community of Egypt.
Christians have long been
a persecuted minority in Egypt, yet what little protections that
existed under the previous regime have now been swept aside by mob
rule and unchecked spates of violence. Such a drift has been seen
across the Mena region, with the initial optimism of the Arab Spring
now giving way to a Christian Winter. Instead of emerging
democracies, the domestic upheaval has led to a resurgence of
Salafist fundamentalism. Increasingly, Christian people in
predominantly Muslim nations are being harassed and terrorised to the
point of seeking emigration.
In support of Tawadros II
remarks, Lord Alton, Honorary President of the British Coptic
Association and Chairman of the Cross-Party Working Group on Human
Dignity, stated:
"When Mohamed Morsi
was first elected, after 29 years of Mubarak's dictatorial rule, he
was entrusted with a unique and brief opportunity to overturn a
history of religious discrimination in Egypt; and indeed he pledged
to do so.
The Dignitatis Humanae Institute aims to uphold human dignity based on the anthropological truth that man is born in the image and likeness of God and therefore has an innate human dignity of infinite worth to be upheld. The Institute promotes this understanding by supporting Christians in public life, assisting them to present effective and coherent responses to increasing efforts to silence the Christian voice in the public square.
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