Author:
Publication: Zenit.org
Date: February 5, 2001
Muslims are now "encouraged to kill
Christians" in Egypt after a court this week acquitted most of those accused
of massacring Christians in January last year, a leading Coptic cleric
charged.
"All the murderers were acquitted.
That means Muslims are encouraged to kill Christians. They are being told
'Go ahead. Kill Coptic Christians'," Bishop Wissa of Balyana, which includes
the town of Al-Kosheh, told Agence France-Presse.
A court in the southern city of
Sohag sentenced four Muslims to prison for between one year and 10 years,
and acquitted 92 others over the massacre that left 20 Christians and one
Muslim dead in the nearby town of Al-Kosheh.
Some 38 of the 58 Muslim defendants
had faced the death penalty in the massacre, the worst Christian-Muslim
bloodshed in 20 years. "This verdict means that Christians cannot live
in safety. It also means that there is no justice or law," the bishop said
when contacted by telephone from Cairo. He said he "expected new massacres
of Christians because this verdict means that the life of Christians has
no value."
When interviewed a year ago, Bishop
Wissa accused the state security forces in Al-Kosheh of either turning
a blind eye or giving the green light for Muslims to attack Copts.
He spoke of lingering anger over
the fact that no police were punished for allegedly torturing and mistreating
1,000 Copts during a murder investigation two years earlier.
Meanwhile, Bishop Bassanti of Helwan,
near the capital Cairo, urged the court to reconsider its verdict to "preserve
national unity" after telling that the decision was "too lenient" and "makes
light of human life."