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Maspero Copts fume at media, army and government
Coptic Christians staging a sit-in at Maspero vow in even stronger terms to maintain their protest after coming under violent attack overnight Saturday
Published in Ahram Online on 15 - 05 - 2011

‎“I don't know whether or not you are honest! Many reporters have twisted our words and ‎changed facts on what has been going on! This is how terrible the press is in Egypt!” fumed ‎Peter Yakoob, head of the makeshift clinic at the Coptic Maspero sit-in, while talking to Ahram Online. After ‎voicing dissatisfaction over the “disgraceful” role of the media in the ongoing sectarian ‎strife, Yakoob hit out at the “passive” army and government.‎
The young doctor was evidently exasperated by Saturday's bloody attacks on Copts, when ‎a huge number of thugs systematically assaulted and injured many of the peaceful protesters near the State Radio and Television building, using firearms, knives, stones and Molotov cocktails.‎
‎“Several newspapers said only around 25 people had been injured, which is utter ‎nonsense,” Yakoob said. “The fact is that at least 100 sustained wounds that needed to be ‎stitched; another 50 suffered shallow cuts and 10 had bones fractured ... Over 25 people ‎are in critical condition.‎

‎“Some rumours were also circulated thanks to the media. It was wrongfully said we burned ‎a copy of the Quran and killed a Salafist. Such baseless allegations escalated ‎tensions for sure.”‎
According to several first-hand accounts, police and military forces were deployed in small ‎numbers near the sit-in during the attacks but were nothing more than onlookers when ‎the “hired” thugs arrived.‎ Reinforcements came too late to contain the situation.‎
‎“From the injuries I have seen, I can tell that the thugs were trying to kill us. When ‎someone hits you on your forehead [with a sword] he definitely wants you dead,” Yakoob explained in the same angry tone. “Policemen informed us that an attack was on the ‎cards; they knew what was going on but didn't provide us proper protection.‎
‎“The army want us to leave at all costs; they arrived too late and wanted to cross from the ‎side of the street where the injured people were lying, whereas the other side was empty. ‎They even threatened to walk away. Isn't that their job, to protect us?! And they are leaving us vulnerable up until now.‎
‎“This is not sectarian hatred, this is persecution. Our demands are in fact basic rights; when I say I want to be equal to my [Muslim] brother, that's quite reasonable, but the government doesn't respond to us seriously.”‎
Andrawes Eiweda, a member of the political office of the Maspero Youth, also believes the ‎government is unfairly treating Copts. “The sit-in might be suspended if some of our ‎demands were met. However, we have been waiting for a week now and almost nothing ‎happened,” he said. “From the way I see it, the minister of interior is behind the attack. The authorities want us to out.”
‎Today is the eighth day of the sit-in prompted by the attack on Copts and two churches in ‎Imbaba on 7 May. Twelve were killed and more than 200 injured during the ‎sectarian violence.‎ The Coptic protesters refused to end their sit-in at Maspero Sunday, although Pope Shenouda III has asked them to return home.

The Maspero Copts are calling for the reopening of all closed churches, the release of Coptic ‎detainees, and investigations into all sectarian attacks against Christians in the past few years.‎ “All demands have to be fulfilled,” another member from the political office, Sami Shohdi, told Ahram Online.‎


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