Freedom of Religion and Belief Program
Press release – 21 August 2008
Violations by Security Agents Threaten Violence
against Copts in Beni Soueif Village
The
Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR) cautioned today about the
possible outbreak of sectarian violence in the village of Deshasha, located
in the district of Sumusta in the Governorate of Beni Soueif, after police
used violence on Sunday, 17 August, to prevent village Copts from repairing
the only church in the village. The EIPR called for Copts in the village to
be protected from possible violence by their Muslim neighbors and for an
investigation into violations by the security apparatus of the laws on
church renovations.
The
preliminary findings of a field investigation carried out by EIPR
researchers found that a policeman assigned to guard the Archangel Michael
Church in Deshasha hit three women (who asked to remain anonymous) while
they were taking sand into the church to be used to fix the floor, cracked
as a result of water collection underneath. According to statements from
victims and eyewitnesses, the policeman stopped the three women and refused
to allow them to bring the sand into the church, telling them, “You won’t
bring one grain of sand into the church but over my dead body.”
After the assault, rumors spread in the village that the Copts had locked
the policeman inside the church, beat him, and tore his clothes. Several
local Copts, both men and women, said that they had been threatened with
violence by their Muslim neighbors and that they were afraid to leave their
homes as a result.
“The
worrying rise in sectarian tension we've seen in Deshasha is a direct result
of violations committed by the police,” said EIPR director Hossam Bahgat.
“This incident must be investigated and those responsible held accountable.”
On
17 and 18 August, the police arrested six Coptic youths in the village: Rizq
Labib Basili, Ashraf Youssef Samaan, Samir Ibrahim Amin, Samir Ramzi Zaki,
Sameh Makram Armanius, and Wahid Ayad Hanna. According to the young men’s
attorney, they were transferred to the public prosecutor’s office and then
later released after questioning on charges of assaulting a public servant
and using violence to prevent him from fulfilling his duties. The prosecutor
also released the policeman after questioning him on charges of hitting the
three women.
Article 2 of Presidential Decree 391/2005 allows the repair of existing
church facilities without a prior permit; church officials need only give
written notice to the provincial engineering authorities. Nevertheless,
officials from the Archangel Michael Church and the Archbishopric of Biba,
al-Fashan, and Sumusta (to which the church is affiliated) say that State
Security Intelligence has prevented any repairs to the church for the last
eleven years. Church officials say it is the oldest church in the Sumsuta
district, built in 1895 and last renovated in 1930. EIPR researchers
personally observed the dilapidated state of the wood and brick church,
which serves 100 Christian families in the village.
“Why
would State Intelligence intervene—and illegally at that—to prevent the
repair of a floor in an existing church that has not been renovated for more
than 75 years?” Bahgat said. “The Archangel Michael Church in Deshasha is
but one example of the futility of any efforts to reform and unify
construction and renovation laws for places of worship so long as security
agents continue to violate existing laws in a discriminatory manner and with
complete impunity.”