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Islamist Groups Leading in Egypt’s Parliamentary Elections

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Islamist groups made a strong showing this week in the first stages of Egypt’s parliamentary elections, according to figures released today by elections officials, renewing concerns Christians have about their future in the country.
 
The Freedom and Justice Party, affiliated with the once-banned Muslim Brotherhood, won 40 percent of the vote overall. The Al Nour Party, made up of members of the extremist Salafi group, garnered 20 percent of the vote. By comparison, the relatively liberal Egypt Social Democratic Party received 15 percent of the total vote.
The candidates where campaigning for 112 seats, but the total number of seats allocated from this round of voting will not be known until after a run-off election on Monday (Dec. 5).
The election results confirmed the fears of Egyptian Christians, many of whom believe that Islamists will take control of the country in the wake of the revolution that deposed former President Hosni Mubarak. Egyptians now wait for the run-offs and final two rounds of this election, another election to seat the second half of Egypt’s bicameral chamber, and then finally the election for the next president. Further wins by Islamists, Christians said, will guarantee increased persecution against them or at a minimum, entrench their second-hand status in the country.
Echoing the remarks of most Christians in the country, Marcelle Mageh, 22, blamed conservative Muslims for the dramatic increase in attacks against Christians in Egypt after Mubarak fell from power. Sitting in the Church of St. Theresa in Cairo along with her fiancé shortly after casting their ballots on Monday (Nov. 28), Mageh said the prospect of the Muslim Brotherhood running the country along with the Salafis frightens her.
“You see all the problems that have happened before they got into power,” she said. “Imagine what will happen when they get into power.”
After the Revolution
After Mubarak stepped down from power on Feb. 11, there was a brief period of elation among Egypt’s Christians. But the joy was quickly replaced by fear after a string of attacks against Christians by self-identified members of the Salafi movement and other Muslims.
Members of the loosely affiliated Islamic group attacked Christian-owned homes and business, set church buildings on fire, and prevented congregations from opening or reopening churches, and in one incident “punished” one Christian after accusing him of renting an apartment to two prostitutes. They ordered him to convert to Islam or they would cut off his ear. He refused to convert.
For about two weeks in April, members of the Salafi movement, along with Muslims from across the country, blocked off the city of Qena when the interim government nominated a Coptic man as governor over Qena Province. He was later replaced with a Muslim.
Over the same year, the Egyptian army attacked at least two monasteries. And during an unusual show of brutality in October, the army killed at least 27 people in Cairo, at least 23 of them Christians, who were protesting the torching of a church in Aswan.
To date, no one has been tried for any of the attacks or killings. In fact, the government has instead arrested numerous Copts in connection with the incidents, claiming they incited “sectarian” violence or possessed illegal weapons.
Two-Faced Rhetoric
Part of the reason Copts are so nervous about the Islamists gaining power, the Salafis in particular, is that they accuse them of being deceptive with their rhetoric. When the Islamists are trying to gain power, they espouse policies they later deny or scoff at in private among their co-religionists, said Coptic Catholic Antowan Zekaria, 25.
 
“If they are in power, they show their real faces,” he said.
In the case of the Qena protests, Salafi leaders said their objection to the Coptic governor was not because he was a Christian, but because he was allegedly connected to the Mubarak government. But video shot at the protests later showed protestors screaming because, they said, having a Christian “rule” over a Muslim was against Islamic law.
Salafi religious leaders have also made numerous statements emphasizing Christian’s second-citizen status in Egypt, such as saying no Christian is fit to be president over Egypt. Several mass attacks against Christians in Upper Egypt happened this year after Salafi sheiks prompted attacks during Friday prayers.
Not all Christians in Egypt are convinced that the country under Brotherhood and Salafi leadership would lead to more persecution.
“It depends on the maturity of the leadership that comes afterward and how much they realize the importance of the image of Egypt internationally,” said the Rev. Mouneer Anis, bishop of the Episcopal and Anglican Diocese of Egypt.
Lilian Sobhy, a surgeon who worked at a medical clinic in Kasr El Dobara during the recent riots, said that more persecution is coming, but that Christians who focus on that miss the larger point. The point, she said, isn’t that persecution will come, but how to deal with it when it does.
“We believe that if the church is standing in the right place it is going to be glorious, so we don’t really care who is going to win,” she said. “Wherever it is going to happen, we believe that the Lord is sovereign.”
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Muslim Brotherhood’s political party has Christian vice president, Copts and women members

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Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood has formed a new political party with a seemingly more moderate composition, including a Christian vice president, 93 Coptic Christian members and 978 women members.

The Muslim Brotherhood’s newly-formed Freedom and Justice Party or Ikhwan has already submitted its legal documents to the political parties committee, in order to position itself for parliamentary elections in September. However, it said it will not field a presidential candidate in elections next year, The Atlantic said.

The September elections will be the first free election the country has had since 1952.

Mohamed Saad el-Katatni, secretary general of Ikhwan, said, “The party is open to all Egyptians, Muslims and Copts alike,” according to Christian Today.

Suspicions nonetheless abound as to the intentions of the Ikhwan. Concerns have been raised about alleged links to the Salafis, which the The Guardian described as “Egypt’s Taliban.” Others are concerned that although Ikhwan claimed in the past that it would only eye 33 percent of the parliament’s seats, now they say they will contest up to 50 percent, The Atlantic said.

New constitution

Ikhwan cofounder and spokesman Issam el-Erian told The Guardian, “After 100 days we are sure the revolution is on the right track. In a few months we will have a new parliament and then a new constitution for the new Egypt.”

The Muslim Brotherhood has long advocated a stricter implementation of sharia law. Erian told The Guardian that Ikhwan and the Muslim Brotherhood share “the same mission and goals, but with different roles.”

Critics say Ikhwan’s Christian vice president Rafiq Habib, a Coptic intellectual, may be window dressing to quell the concerns of Christians who form 10 percent of the country’s population, Christian Today said.

Post Mubarak, there has been a rise of violence against Christians. Last month when a Christian governor was appointed in Qena province, Salafis were blamed for blocking railway lines. This month, Muslim extremists in Cairo torched two churches killing 12 people.

Many Christians fear that a stronger Muslim Brotherhood, more so with its alliances with smaller Muslim organizations, may lead to an Islamic state that will be far more oppressive than Mubarak’s government.

Opponents say the Muslim Brotherhood is rife with internal divisions, and its standing post Mubarak is exaggerated. Journalist Hani Shukrullah of al-Ahram told The Guardian, “The brotherhood will not be the same any more. The ideal environment for them was authoritarianism but in a pluralistic political space it will be a struggle of programs and agendas, not of ideology or religion.”

Salafi resurgence

The resurgence of the Salafis is nonetheless concerning. Many Salafis were released from jail including Abboud al-Zumar, who was charged for the 1981 assassination of president Anwar Sadat. Hundreds of other Salafis living abroad are said to have been permitted to return to Egypt, The Guardian said.

Liberals claim the military is enlisting the Salafis to preach reconciliation amid a rise in sectarian violence. Some Christians say the Salafis are actually aligned with the Muslim Brotherhood.

Muntasser al-Zayyat, a leading Islamist lawyer told The Guardian, “[T]he secularists are using the Salafis to attack the Ikhwan.” The Muslim Brotherhood denies ties with the Salafis and say it is a smear campaign by opponents.

An International Christian Concern report quotes Wagih Yacoub, a Coptic human rights activist who said, “There is no doubt that the Muslim Brotherhood and the Salafis are allied. The Brotherhood plays politics and the Salafis are causing chaos so they can empty Egypt of Christians and make it an Islamic state,” according to Christian Today.

Yacoub said in the ICC report, “Lots of Egyptian people, including moderate Muslims, are worried. If Egypt becomes an Islamic state, it may mean civil war. We won’t get protection from the military council or the police forces. Our homes will be attacked at any minute, any time. Lots of people are scared. How will we protect ourselves? There will be bloodshed.”

More politically active

The Salafis claim their priority is preaching. However they have been becoming more politically active of late. In March they lauded the constitutional referendum as a “victory for religion,” and they are planning to form two parties for the parliamentary elections in September, namely Fadila (Virtue) and Nur (Light), The Guardian said.

Sheikh Abdel-Moneim al-Shahat, a Salafi spokesman said a post-Mubarak liberal constitution would be “catastrophe,” and told The Guardian, “We want a democratic constitution but it should be in line with sharia law. We won’t accept a Christian or a woman as president. The liberals want a democratic constitution but some of it would be against sharia, especially on issues of personal morality.”

U.K. bishop Michael Nazir-Ali said there is a “worrying extremist radical Islamist element” that runs through the current unrest in the Arab and Islamic world. “This will affect not only Christians but secular and moderately-minded Muslims as well – and may affect the future political shape of the Middle East. The West is also vulnerable to this kind of extremism,” Christian Today reported.

Sources:

http://au.christiantoday.com/article/muslim-brotherhood-appoints-christian-vice-president/11090.htm

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/may/19/muslim-brotherhood-poised-prosper-egypt

http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2011/05/could-the-muslim-brotherhood-win-egypts-presidency/238914/

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Analyst blames Mubarak regime for persecution of Christian Copts

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A Middle East analyst accused recently the regime of Egypt’s President Mohammad Hosni Mubarak of inflaming violence and hostility by the Muslim majority against Christian Copts.

Raymond Ibrahim, a lecturer of the National Defense Intelligence College, accused the Mubarak regime of spearheading the Muslim Brotherhood and supporting the “severe persecution” and intimidation of the nation’s eight million Christian Coptic minority, according to World Tribune.

Ibrahim, who is also associate director of the Middle East Forum, said in a piece he wrote for the Hudson Institute that as Egypt quells pro-democracy opposition, it has simultaneously resorted to “medieval persecution of the Copts.”

The World Tribune cites accusations made by leading Egyptian scholars that link the Copts with Israel and who claim they are hoarding ammunition and weapons in monasteries. A leading cleric, Mohammed Al Awa, told A-Jazeera satellite television, “Israel is in the heart of the Coptic cause, preparing to wage war against Muslims.”

Al Awa urged Muslims to obstruct the growth of Egypt’s Coptic Church, warning that unless they act, the “country will burn,” and saying that the country’s security forces are banned from searching the monasteries and churches for weapons, World Tribune reported.

Ibrahim wrote in Hudson New York that such a claim is “amazing” because “Coptic monasteries are not only at the mercy of the state, but easy prey to Islamist and Bedouin attacks.” He noted that Copts make up only 12 percent of the population.

The Hudson New York piece also said Muslim leaders have been sending out rumors that Pope Shenouda III and the Copts “kidnap” Coptic women who convert to Islam, then torture and re-indoctrinate them to Christianity in desert monasteries. However, the women publicly deny ever having converted to Islam.

The Front of Islamic Egypt in a statement said Copts will experience a “bloodbath.” Last month over 10 mass demonstrations were held by thousands of Muslims shouting, “Shenouda, just wait, we will dig your grave with our own hands,” and other threats against Copts, the Hudson New York said.

Questioning why the Mubarak regime did not simply investigate the monasteries and clear them in order to defuse tensions, Ibrahim noted, “The Copts find themselves again in a period of severe persecution,” World Tribune reported.

The World Tribune noted that Copts in Washington have also been lobbying in Congress on behalf of Egypt’s Coptic Christians, noting that the U.S. annually gives Egypt $1.3 billion in military aid.

For more information go to http://theundergroundsite.com/index.php/2010/09/uscirf-says-egypt%E2%80%99s-reconciliation-talks-worsen-abuse-of-christians-13799 and http://theundergroundsite.com/index.php/2010/08/coptics-seek-arrest-warrant-against-muslim-cleric-for-hate-speech-13325 and http://theundergroundsite.com/index.php/2010/06/egyptian-couple-will-drop-attempted-murder-charges-if-they-can-build-church-12536.

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Indonesian police destroy Christian house church

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Local police in an Indonesian village tore down recently a house church that had been in use regularly since 2006.

Amid clashes with church members, police demolished the Narogong Pentecostal Church house in Limusnunggal village, south of Jakarta. Ten people were arrested, Compass Direct News said.

The destruction was spurred by the Forum of the Muslim Brotherhood of Limusnanggal, a group which emerged in 2008. From the start they fought to drive out the church and three months before, expressed their objection to the Cileungsi offices, CDN said.

However other residents in the area posed no objection to the church. Local Block Captain Junaedi Syamsudin said, “It was named a house of worship, and there was no problem,” CDN said.

Word had leaked out on the day that the church was to be destroyed, causing dozens of people to surround the building early in the morning to guard the church. The 10 people who were arrested in the melee were questioned and then released, Police Commissioner Zulkarnain Harahap told CDN.

A police official alleged many demonstrators were from outside the area, and claimed some policemen and one civilian were injured. Deputy commissioner Tomex Kurniawan said,  “Hundreds of people were blocking the way and prepared to fight when the house of worship was demolished,” CDN said.

Kurniawan said the police were positive, calmed emotions and contained the violence, but alleged two of his men were injured. Eddy Hidayat, head of Bogor police, said they were compelled to destroy the church because the permit was only for a home, not a church, CDN said.

However Hotlan P. Silaen, church building coordinator, decried the absence of neutrality among the police saying they succumbed to the demands of the Muslim group, CDN said.

Rev. Rekson Sitorus said the church was applying for a permit for a church building. However, because the church was destroyed, some 200 worshippers, many of whom work for the Bantar Gebang garbage dump, will now have to go to the nearest worship venue which is very far away, CDN said.

Sitorus said legal action will be sought by the church against those who are behind the demolishment of the church, CDN said.

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