Reuters.com

Ten hurt in Christian-Muslim clashes in Egypt
http://www.reuters.com/article/latestCrisis/idUSL11621067

Fri May 11, 2007

(Adds more buildings reported burned, government comment)

CAIRO, May 11 (Reuters) - Hundreds of Egyptian Muslims and Christians hurled
bricks and firebombs at each other in clashes on Friday south of Cairo in a
dispute over building a church that erupted after Muslim prayers, security
sources said.

Ten Christians were injured in the clashes that broke out in the village of
Behma, about 60 km (40 miles) from the Egyptian capital, and at least 10
Christian houses and shops were set ablaze before police quelled the
violence, the sources said.

Relations between Muslims and minority Coptic Christians in Egypt are
generally peaceful despite sporadic violence, and restrictions on building
churches have been one of the main grievances of Egypt's mainly Coptic
Christian community.

Christians comprise up to 10 percent of Egypt's roughly 75 million people,
with the remainder being primarily Sunni Muslim.

Security sources said rumours that village Christians did not have a permit
for church construction had sparked anger among Muslims that turned to
violence after Friday prayers when about 300 Muslims clashed with a group of
about 200 Christians.

The two sides fought each other with sticks and threw bricks and firebombs,
the sources said, and between 10 and 20 houses and shops were set on fire
including several shops that sold wood and construction materials.

Police intervened to stop the clashes, arresting 17 people from both faiths
and sealing off the village, they said.

A spokesman for Egypt's interior ministry confirmed that around 500 Muslims
had gathered after Friday prayers, and that the entrances to three homes had
been set on fire. He said three people were hurt in the commotion but
declined to characterise it as a clash.

One security source said Christians in Behma were expanding a house that was
used informally for prayer, although others said the Christians were
constructing a new church from scratch. The sources could not immediately
say whether the Christians had obtained proper building permits.

Egypt suffered its worst Christian-Muslim clashes in decades in 1999, when
20 Christians were killed, 22 people wounded and scores of shops destroyed
in sectarian strife in the southern village of Kosheh.

In February, Muslims set fire to Christian-owned shops in southern Egypt
after hearing rumours of a love affair between a Muslim woman and a Coptic
Christian man.

Last year, a 45-year-old Muslim man stabbed a Coptic Christian man to death
and wounded five others in the Mediterranean city of Alexandria, sparking
three days of sectarian clashes in which one Muslim was killed. Egypt says
the attacker was mentally ill.

© Reuters 2007. All rights reserved.

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