CAIRO: Egypt is continuing to crackdown on Shia Muslims in the country. According to a report in the state-run al-Ahram newspaper on Saturday, two Shia activists were arrested upon arrival at Cairo International Airport from Tehran for allegedly carrying “Shia books.” It is the latest crackdown on the minority Muslim group in Egypt. In recent years, Shia Muslims in the country have faced hardship, despite a large number visiting the country in order to fulfill pilgrimage duties to the Hussein Mosque in Old Cairo. Ahram reported that activist Mohamed al-Taher, son of Al-Taher al-Hashiemy, the secretary general of the Hashemeya Sufi order and one of the founders of the Sufi-led Egyptian Tahrir Party could face criminal charges. The second activist is Mohamed al-Husseini. They were also to participate in the International Conference on Islamic Awakening and Young People. Fellow Shia activists have been reported to be threatening a sit-in at the airport if the Shia are not released. The detentions come less than one month after Egypt's security closed the Hussein Mosque, arguing that the Sunni majority in Egypt would become enraged over seeing Ashura celebrations in Cairo. The celebrations mark the killing of the Prophet Mohamed's grandson Imam Hussein. “It is not new for us Shia in Egypt,” said Ali, 34. “This is my country, but I feel there is so much pressure on me to be someone I am not and to believe in things that are not my own,” he told Bikya Masr. The reason is simple: he is Shiite. In Egypt, a predominantly Sunni Muslim country, the minority Shia have been arrested and forced into silence. Late last year, Egyptian police arrested at least four Shia Muslims, including a visiting Australian citizen. They were charged with insulting and denying tenets of religion, judicial sources were reported saying. Security officials reported that the Shia men were part of a group of 24 that were rounded up last week in Cairo. According to the police, most have been released, but it is still unclear how many remain behind bars. “This is the struggle we face on a daily basis and have been forced to live in silence and fear of what the police would do if they found out we were Shia,” Ali continued. The Australian man's family alerted the Australian authorities after Safaa al-Awadi, 44, did not return to Perth when scheduled. He was freed one month later after facing charges of blasphemy. Seven other Shiites have been in detention since mid-2009 and charged with “forming a group trying to spread Shi'ite ideology that harms the Islamic religion.” In 2010, Egypt's Minister of Religious Endowments, Mahmoud Hamdy Zaqzouq, said in statements during a meeting with the Grand Mufti of Mount Lebanon, Sheikh Mohamed Ali Jouzo, that Egypt has “no mosques belonging to any religious or sectarian schools.” He added that there are no Shia Mosques in Egypt. The minister stressed that all mosques and religious institutions that number some 104,000 are subject to full supervision of the Ministry of Religious Endowments. Followers of Shia doctrine believe the Prophet Mohamed should have been succeeded by his cousin Ali rather than his companion Abu Bakr, who is considered the first Imam. Ali was the fourth in traditional Sunni belief. Making matters difficult in Egypt is that Sunnis believe any suggestion that Abu Bakr was not the rightful successor is akin to blasphemy. “We live under these conditions every day and most of the time I keep my mouth shut, but for our government to insist that we don't exist is insulting and wrong,” added Ali. BM ShortURL: http://goo.gl/kNXdh Tags: Arrest, Books, featured, Islam, Shia Section: Egypt, Features, Latest News, Religion