Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free (JN 8:32)

World

Saturday, Feb 11, 2012

Sectarian Clashes in Egypt Continue for Third Day

Police fired live ammunition into the air and lobbed tear gas into rioting crowds of Christians and Muslims on Sunday in a third day of sectarian violence.

0
  • Sectarian Clashes in Egypt Continue for Third Day
    Egyptian muslim protesters throw rocks past a burning gas canister near the St. Maximus Church in the northern Mediterranean city of Alexandria in Egypt Sunday, April 16, 2006. Police fired live ammunition into the air and lobbed tear gas into rioting cro
April 17, 2006|8:48 am

ALEXANDRIA, Egypt (AP) - Police fired live ammunition into the air and lobbed tear gas into rioting crowds of Christians and Muslims on Sunday in a third day of sectarian violence in Egypt's second-largest city.

One Muslim man reportedly died Sunday of his wounds. Police said 40 people had been wounded in clashes and 80 had been arrested over the weekend.

The riots were touched off Friday by knife attacks at three Coptic Christian churches, which killed one man and wounded up to 16 other people. A mentally ill man is being held in the stabbings.

Some 2,000 police fought back Sunday against 200 Coptic Christians who fled into St. Maximus Church in Alexandria, after the mob began hurling stones and bottles. Other demonstrators tossed Molotov cocktails from the balconies of nearby buildings.

Police were seen beating a young Coptic boy, who was among the crowd that fled. Later, a huge mob of what appeared to be Muslim protesters charged the police cordon from the other side.

Security forces also used tear gas Saturday to quash violence that erupted among several hundred Coptic Christians and Muslims at a funeral procession for a 78-year-old man killed Friday outside the Saints Church in the Sidi Bishr district.

Like us on Facebook

Sporadic scuffles continued after nightfall Sunday.

Mustafa Mohammed Mustafa, a lawmaker, said a 24-year-old Muslim died Sunday after being beaten by Christians a day earlier.

A judge in Alexandria on Sunday ordered the alleged perpetrator of Friday's attacks on the three churches, Mahmoud Salah-Eddin Abdel-Raziq, to be kept under observation at a mental hospital. Abdel-Raziq had earlier been diagnosed with schizophrenia.

Coptic Christians are 10 percent of Egypt's 73 million population and generally live in peace with the country's Muslim majority. But occasional sectarian clashes have broken out. Most recently, Muslim militants attacked churches in Alexandria protesting the distribution of a DVD that they deemed offensive to Islam. Four people were killed in those riots.

Christians also complain that they suffer job discrimination, particularly in the high ranks of the civil service system

Officials said more security forces had been sent to Alexandria to maintain calm, but residents were despondent about their damaged homes and shops.

"We were afraid so we locked ourselves inside our houses, but they broke in and destroyed everything," Sami Aziz, a Muslim who said about eight Copts who stormed his home Saturday night.

Ehab Sami, a Copt, said his electronics shop opposite St. Maximus was looted.

"It was the Muslims, and the police were collaborating with them. I asked the police to help me, but they didn't lift a finger," Sami said.

Copyright © 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.

0
Top Stories

Evangelicals 'Outraged' by Obama's Contraceptive Compromise

President Obama's attempt at a "compromise" in ...

Santorum Brushes Off Money Concerns, Blasts Obama on Religious Freedom

Rick Santorum disregarded Mitt Romney's money-flush campaign in his CPAC 2012 address saying that the presidential race is not about who has the most cash, but about stopping Barack Obama and his growing grip on American freedoms.

Elevation, 50 NC Churches to Serve Homeless for LOVE Week

Over 50 churches in the Charlotte, N.C.-area will ...

Lawsuit Claims Unlawful Distribution of 'Charitable Assets' by TBN Directors

A lawsuit recently filed by the former head of finance for the Trinity Broadcasting Network claims that the directors of the widely-viewed Christian television network have illegally taken advantage of more than $50 million in "charitable assets" for their own good.