Freedom of
Religion and Belief Program
News Release - 21
July 2008
New Report Finds
Rising Sectarian Tensions in Egypt since April
The Egyptian
Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR) today issued its second quarterly
report on freedom of religion and belief in Egypt, documenting developments
in the area of religious freedom during the months of April, May and June of
2008.
The report reveals
an overall escalation of sectarian tensions during the reporting period. In
some instances mentioned in the report, acts or rumors attributed to one
member of the Coptic Christian Community resulted in collective violence
against all members of that community – as was the case in two separate
incidents in the governorate of Fayoum last June.
The report also
provides an account of the armed assault on the Abu Fana Coptic monastery in
the governorate of Menya, against a backdrop of a dispute over the ownership
of the land surrounding the monastery. The EIPR’s First Quarterly Report had
documented a similar attack against the monastery in January 2008.
The new report also
reviews a number of significant court decisions issued during the reporting
period. Particular attention is given to the decision by the Court of
Administrative Justice last April to withdraw the State Award for
Achievement in the Arts from its 2007 winner, renowned poet Helmy Salim. The
court found a poem previously written by Salim to be “insulting to the
divine being,” rendering the decision by an independent jury to grant him a
state award legally invalid.
A summary of the new
law imposing an absolute ban on demonstrations inside places of worship is
provided by the report. Also reviewed are the new statute establishing
administrative and financial independence for dar al-ifta (office of
the State's top religious adviser), the Church's amendments to the
personal status regulations for Copts, and the fatwa issued by Al-Azhar's
Islamic Research Council that the family of a Christian convert to Islam may
not receive any of his/her inheritance. The report further provides an
overview of the most significant political developments and new Egyptian and
international reports and public events related to religious affairs in
Egypt.
The aim of these
series of reports is to provide law- and policymakers, researchers, the
media and other stakeholders with a primary source for documented
information on the most significant political, legal, and social
developments affecting freedom of religion and belief in Egypt.
To read the
report in English

For the
Arabic version
