http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2010/982/eg7.htm

21 - 27 January 2010
Issue No. 982
Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875


Spreading tolerance

The People's Assembly called for the formation of a higher council for 
citizenship as a step to contain tension between Muslims and Christians, 
reports Gamal Essam El-Din 

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In a six-page report discussed on Sunday the People's Assembly urged the 
government to establish a higher council for citizenship with the objective of 
tackling "national unity problems and containing sectarian incidents between 
Muslims and Christians". The report, prepared by a joint parliamentary 
committee, assessed the findings of a fact-finding commission on the attack 
which left six Copts and a Muslim policeman dead outside a church in the 
southern city of Nagaa Hammadi on Coptic Christmas Eve. Speaker of the Assembly 
Fathi Sorour said the attack "not only wounded the Coptic community but all of 
Egypt". 

"Let me stress," Sorour continued, "that this was an individual criminal act, 
like a clash between two brothers living in one home." 

Sorour criticised those "who jump to hasty conclusions and exploit these 
incidents to associate Islam with terrorism and extremist thinking". He added 
that he could not help thinking that "the heinous crime of Nagaa Hammadi could 
be the result of a foreign conspiracy aimed at destabilising Egypt." 

The Egyptian constitution guarantees equal rights for both Christians and 
Muslims, Sorour stressed. "Article 1 of the constitution clearly states that 
the political system of the Arab Republic of Egypt is based on citizenship, 
while Article 5 bans the foundation of political parties on a religious basis." 

Praising President Hosni Mubarak, Sorour recalled how he had made Coptic 
Christmas -- 7 January -- a national holiday for all Egyptians. 

Sorour launched a scathing attack on the European parliament which has 
announced that it will discuss the Nagaa Hammadi incident on 21 January. "This 
is blatant interference in internal Egyptian affairs," Sorour said. "Everyone 
should know that Copts are in no way a sectarian minority but form an integral 
part of Egyptian national cohesion."

"It is the duty of the Muslim majority to listen to the grievances of Copts 
while Copts should refrain from taking Nagaa Hammadi as evidence of sectarian 
strife in Egypt. We Muslims fully respect Copts not only because they are our 
national brethren but also because Islam teaches us to respect Christians."

The assembly's report insisted that "the Nagaa Hammadi attack was an individual 
act of revenge, which is something common among southerners in Upper Egypt". 
According to the report, "Mohamed El-Kammoni, an ex-convict with five previous 
arrests for attacks on both Muslims and Christians, is the prime suspect. The 
police investigation has made it clear that no religious or sectarian reasons 
incited El-Kammoni to commit the crime. El-Kammoni was deeply influenced by the 
rape of a 12-year- old Muslim girl by a Coptic youngman last November in nearby 
Farshout... The fact that a Christian boy distributed a CD containing images of 
the raped girl inflamed the situation."

Since his release from prison in 2004 El-Kammoni has not been implicated in any 
crimes. He worked as a bodyguard and was managing a gym. 

The report cited Bishop Kirolos of Nagaa Hammadi, who said "Copts highly 
appreciate the role of Muslim leaders in spreading a climate of tolerance and 
in standing against those who do their best to shake the foundations of 
national unity between Muslims and Christians." The Bishop stressed that the 
Archbishop of Nagaa Hammadi had been the first to condemn the rape of a Muslim 
girl in Farshout.

Governor of Qena, Magdi Ayoub, stated in the report that "the Nagaa Hammadi act 
is an individual crime. If it was perpetrated for religious or sectarian 
reasons, we would be the first to announce this because it is not good at all 
that we keep anything about this crime secret."

The report criticised some satellite television channels and print media for 
inciting hatred and misleading citizens about the incident and urged the 
government to set up a higher council for citizenship. "This council, including 
members of the two houses of parliament -- the People's Assembly and Shura 
Council -- local councils, police officers and Muslim and Christian leaders, 
would be tasked with containing tension between Muslims and Copts and spreading 
a culture of tolerance." 

The report met with a mixed reception from MPs. Georgette Qillini, appointed 
Coptic MP, launched a scathing attack against the report, insisting that "it is 
biased and reflects the point of view of security officials and the governor of 
Qena, even though he is a Copt himself." She described the attack as "a purely 
sectarian crime and by no means an individual criminal attack," she contends 
that the Copts of Nagaa Hammadi face persecution and suffer from fear and 
oppression and they pray to God that the governor of Qena be dismissed from his 
job". He is a security man and the fact that he is Coptic will not prevent me 
from attacking him and sharply criticising his security policies."

Qillini's words elicited an angry response from MPs, led by Sorour himself who 
accused Qillini of "exaggerating the incident" and of "trying to make herself a 
heroine". Sorour insisted that "regardless of the motives, the fact remains 
that this is an individual criminal act because it reflects the evil intentions 
of one person and not Egyptian society as a whole."

Ibtessam Habib, another appointed Coptic MP, urged the government to give a 
helping hand to Copts living in Nagaa Hammadi and its satellite villages. "Some 
of them left their homes for fear of revenge and I hope that the government 
will compensate them financially," said Habib. She also agreed with Qillini 
that "sectarian rather than personal motives lie behind the Nagaa Hammadi 
attack."

NDP MPs poured scorn on Qillini, sharply criticising her for "being quick to 
label the attack as sectarian." NDP spokesman Abdel-Ahad Gamaleddin lamented 
that "opening a debate about Nagaa Hammadi at the European parliament on 21 
January will be blatant interference in the internal affairs of Egypt. 
Europeans would do better trying to contain Islamophobia and getting rid of the 
discrimination against Muslims in place since 11 September 2001."


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