• 14:38
  • Wednesday ,24 January 2018
العربية

No to forced displacement and customary reconciliation sessions

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Article Of The Day

00:01

Wednesday ,24 January 2018

No to forced displacement and customary reconciliation sessions

When do the series of assaults on the Copts come to an end? I mean those assaults where the assailants are never punished and the Copts have to pay for some forms of intolerance, ignorance, deterioration of education, widespread illiteracy, and hatred of the others.

Some Copts were attacked in the village of Dawar, Behira governorate as one Coptic worker decided to claim his right after he did some work worth 300 EGP! The Muslim party claimed the Coptic worker has harassed his wife and therefore houses of several Copts were attacked.  Some angry mobs decided to to disrupt public order and endanger the safety and security of society and the damage to national unity and social peace. They gave themselves the right to intimidate and destroy properties of the Copts. Those are criminals and should be punished according to the law. 
 
Who entitled those criminals to punish the Copts for crimes they didn’t commit. Why the criminals think they are safe and not punishable?  They are safe as long as customary reconciliation sessions are held to secure the criminals and wrong the victims? 
 
After all the attacks against the Copts, some people are calling to displace the Copts from this village, which is aparetnly another crime against the constitution and law. Forced displacement in international law is a war crime and proves Egypt is a semistate. The government has to stop such attacks and save its identity from such threat against the nation with its elements.