The newly elected Pope of the Coptic Church in Egypt, Bishop
Tawadros II, has approved Article 2 of the draft constitution on the
role of Islamic Sharia in the state.
Article 2 of the 1971 Constitution stipulates that the "principles of Sharia are the main source of legislation."
The issue has been the subject of heated debate over the past weeks,
with Salafis wanting the word "principles" omitted to ensure a more
thorough application of the Islamic law, while civilian powers and the
Muslim Brotherhood wishes to keep the phrase as the same.
Mohamed Abdel Qoddous, rapporteur of the Journalists
Syndicate's committee on fundamental freedoms, said there are three
problems the pope is facing- the equal right of Copts and Muslims to
hold public office, the freedom to build churches, and prevention of
sectarian strife.
In his meeting with the governor of Beheira, Tawadros rejected
quotas for Copts in the executive or legislative branches, arguing that
this would be a kind of discrimination in a country governed by the
principle of citizenship.
He said that the late Pope Shenouda III was forced to play a
political role due to the marginalisation of Copts for 50 years, which
made them resort to the church rather than state bodies.
"I think this
has changed after the 25 January revolution and they can now go to the
Cabinet or Parliament," he said.
He added that the constitution would be "short-lived" if it is not based on the principles of citizenship.
He threatened that the church would withdraw from the Constituent
Assembly if it is controlled by extremists, and said the church is
coordinating with Al-Azhar in this regard.