You fools, cheering on the coup in Egypt because you think that it will be good for the Christians (who had no part in staging it and who have no conceivable vested interest in a return to the previous regime, but who will be blamed for this for evermore because of your utterly ignorant "arguments"), Hussein al-Alak has the real story:
The Western media’s coverage of recent in events in the Middle East has
shown a great weakness in the US/UK understanding of the region. However, it
has also demonstrated a one sided bias which discriminates against all Middle
Eastern religious minorities.
Examples of the media’s discrimination has been shown by its failure to
adequately address direct attacks and murders against Middle Eastern minority
communities, in particular the Christians of both Syria and Egypt.
As in Iraq, Syria’s two-million-strong Christian community, the largest next
to Egypt’s Copts in the entire region, is being devastated. This was recently
illustrated by Nina Shea of the National Review Online, who pointed out those
murdered in Syria include:
Syrian Catholic priest Father François Murad who was murdered in Idlib
on June 23 by rebel militias. How he was killed is not yet known and his
superiors “vigorously deny” that he was a victim of beheading, as some news
sources are claiming.
Syrian Orthodox parish priest Father Fadi Haddad was kidnapped last
December after he left his church in the town of Qatana to negotiate the
release of one of his kidnapped parishioners. A week later, Father Haddad’s
mutilated corpse was found by the roadside with his eyes gouged out.
Yohannes A. (whose last name has been redacted to protect his family)
was summarily executed. An Islamist gunman stopped the bus to Aleppo and
checked the background of each passenger. When the gunman noticed Yohannes’
last name was Armenian, they singled him out.
After finding a cross around his neck, one of the terrorists shot point
blank at the cross, tearing open the man’s chest.
A woman from Hassake recounted in December, to Swedish journalist Nuri
Kino, how her husband and son were shot in the head by Islamists. “Our only
crime is being Christians,” she answered, when asked if there had been a
dispute.
While media agencies have spent a large amount of time reporting on the
military intervention which removed Mohammed Morsi from power in Egypt, some
facts the media have failed to inform the public of include:
A growing trend where Christians are brought to trial for insulting
religion, with “36 cases during 2011 and 2012: 35 for insulting Islam and one
for insulting Christianity.”
A US Report on Religious Freedom admonished the Morsi Government,
admitting that: “While…religious minorities mostly worshiped without
harassment, the government generally failed to prevent, investigate or
prosecute crimes against members of religious minority groups, especially
Christians.”
In June, NBC News even reported how the number of Egyptians receiving
asylum in the US has jumped more than five-fold in recent years.
In 2010, the year before the revolution, just 531 Egyptians received
asylum in the US. In 2012, that number had jumped to 2,882, according to the
Department of Homeland Security’s statistical data for 2012.
Georgia, the former Soviet republic, has also become a popular
destination for Egyptians because of the relative ease in obtaining residence.
A Georgian consular officer said that about 150 Egyptians apply for asylum
every week.
And the Netherlands has made it easier for Christians to claim asylum by
no longer demanding proof that asylum seekers have sought official protection
from persecution.
The Dutch ambassador said in a TV interview that his government was
prompted to make the process easier because of reports of persecution of Christians
and a lack of adequate government protection.
During a recent TV interview, Sheikh Essam Abdulamek, a member of the
parliament’s Shura Council, warned Egypt’s Christians against participating in
the June 30 protests against the Muslim Brotherhood, threatening them by saying
“Do not sacrifice your children” since “general Muslim opinion will not be
silent about the ousting of the president [Morsi].”
On the day the Morsi Government was removed from office, the Vatican
reported that among the episodes of violence in Egypt, there was the immediate
attack against the Catholic parish of St. George, in the village of Delgia,
where groups of Islamists first looted and then burned down the pastor's house
and church buildings.
Meanwhile, Islamists at a pro-Morsi rally on July 4 were filmed pledging
to kill their political opponents and to set Christians “on fire”, claiming
that the removal of Morsi has “created a new Taliban and a new Al-Qaeda in
Egypt”, while stating: “I tell the Christians one word: You live by our side.
We will set you on fire! We will set you on fire!”
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