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Problems on hold
The mighty security
apparatus
Youssef
Sidhom*
With the assault on its church on the evening of Wednesday 18 January, the
village of al-Udeisat in Luxor, Upper Egypt joined a list of other Egyptian
villages that had lived in age-old obscurity until some violent sectarian event
moved them into the realm of international limelight.
Shame indeed!
Instead of gaining world renown on account of being the birthplace of a son or
daughter who realize some unprecedented feat; or a site of a historic discovery,
an ultra-modern facility, or a global event; these modest, hitherto unheard-of
villages carved a place for themselves on the world scene as sites of ferocious
violence. Mobs terrorized, injured, and murdered peaceful residents, looted
their property and set it aflame, for no reason other than that these residents
differed in their faith, and had the temerity to worship in small, modest
churches which they built and the interior of which they renovated years later.
The villages
of Kafr Dimian east of the Delta, Girza in Giza, Beni-Walmes and Tahal-Aameda in
Minya, Upper Egypt, have all claimed places on the world map of events
throughout the last decade. Will other villages or hamlets, the names of which
we never heard before, join them?
A look at the
factors that led to the Udeisat attack highlights several problems, and raises
the bitter question: Till when will such problems remain shelved, or placed on
hold? How can the perpetrators of violence escape unquestioned and unpunished,
either because the inadequacies of the security apparatus remain beyond
accountability, or because of the so-called cosmetic and ineffectual
“reconciliation sessions” in which the victims and attackers are brought
together by the local councils for an official reconciliation following attacks.
The
quasi-governmental al-Ahram Cairo daily termed the Udeisat church a ‘guest
house’. This is a flagrant fallacy intended to establish the concept that the
irregular worship held in the church since 1970, which was sometimes open for
prayers and sometimes closed by the authorities, was illegal since the building
had not been licensed as a church. It should be noted that the Udeisat church is
no exception, but stands as one in a long line of churches the licensing of
which was for decades placed on hold, despite arduous efforts by church
officials to obtain licences. The issue exposes a morbid situation where the
Constitution stipulates freedom of belief and equality between citizens
regardless of their religion, while in fact the security authority grants or
withholds rights of worship according to the whim of its chiefs, with
ignominious bias towards one religious sector and against the other.
A series of
presidential decrees was issued since February 1998, the last of which was last
December, to phase out the legislative restrictions on church building,
restoration and renovation. Local and security authorities however, especially
in Upper Egypt, are unable to grasp that the real implication of these decrees
is to establish equality between Egyptians. Instead, they hold on to their
dominion over the fate of churches, those in charge of them, and their
congregations. Udeisat is a case in point; no sooner had Holy Mass been
conducted in the church following restorations—which, according to the last
presidential decree, may be conducted once the local authorities are “informed”
of them—than the district security chief dropped in. He raged at the priest for
resuming religious services and left in anger, threatening that the matter will
not be overlooked. So, instead of propagating among the population a culture of
acceptance of the other, as implied by the presidential decrees, the security
authorities—secure in their immunity to questioning or accountability—propagated
an entirely different message. They made it clear that presidential decrees
meant nothing to them; they were the powers that be.
Such behavior
on the part of the security authorities encouraged the fanatics in the village,
who could not accept that a Christian would ever be equal to a Muslim, to
conduct their infamous raid on the church. These security officials should thus
be brought to account, since their attitude led the mob to understand that
heinous acts against Christians would go unpunished.
Other details beg explanations. Why was there no security presence whatsoever at
the site of the Udeisat church following the wrathful visit of the security
official? It could not have escaped the authorities that the general mood,
especially between the Muslim fanatics, had become strained.
And who had
access to cut the electric current off the district of the church, thus
facilitating its attack by the mob under the cover of the dark? Unless all the
above issues are investigated transparently and candidly, similar events are
sure to recur.
I do not
regret my call to dedicate 2006 to the cause of national reconciliation, and am
not going back on my effort to promote pro-activity between Muslims and Copts as
an antidote to their mutual alienation and antagonism. But it should be very
clear that the Udeisat attack is no mere antagonism; it is an act of outlawed
hooliganism run wild, and should be accounted for before the law. Infringements
on equality and public order cannot be forgiven, and this should in no way be
confused with reconciliation.
_______________________________
(*) Editor-in-Chief
Watani
Weekly, 29 January, 2006 |