The Catholic Church in Egypt has implicated the regime in the deaths of 25 people, most of them Copts, in the worst outbreak of violence since the fall of Mubarak.
The Church claimed that the army and police “used” a mob of street fighters armed with rifles, sticks, stones and swords who it says carried out an unprovoked attack on thousands of demonstrators in Cairo late Sunday, October 9th.
The protesters, made up of Muslims as well as Christians, marched to Egypt’s state television headquarters, calling for greater action to protect Christians in Egypt after a spate of attacks against them.
On Sunday in central Cairo, 25 people were killed, 17 of them Coptic Christians, and more than 200 others were injured.
Fr. Greiche official spokesman for the Catholic Church in Egypt, described the “anger and hurt” after the deaths of the 25, most of them in their 20s and 30s.
“Today, people are very angry about what happened last night. The army and the police are confronting the Copts. This is the problem. It is not a Christian/Muslim problem anymore.”
Fr. Greiche went on to accuse the government of being complicit in arson attacks on churches, giving tacit approval to Islamists to carry out the attacks.
Sparking yesterday’s violence was alleged government inaction following last month’s arson attack on a re-built church in Marinab, a village in southern Egypt’s Aswan province.
Demonstrators called for the removal of the governor of Aswan who they claim gave permission for the construction work before siding with extremists against the church.
Fr. Greiche said, “The governor gave the green light for the fundamentalists to burn the church near Aswan. It’s the fourth time in recent months that a church has been burnt in this way by Islamists.”
He said that since the fall of Mubarak in February, Islamists across Egypt formerly repressed by the president, were now very active, causing great anxiety to many Muslims as well as Christians.
Fr. Greiche said, “Since the fall of Mubarak, the fundamentalists have developed a very loud voice. The government leaves them to do whatever they want.”
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