Christians gathered in front of the Libyan Embassy in Washington,
D.C., on March 14 to peacefully protest the recent detainment and
torture of Copts in Libya.
One protestor, a Middle Eastern Christian, told CNA that the Libyan
government holds Coptic Christians and “accuses them of evangelizing
against Islam” for possessing Christian Bibles and icons, even though
such items are permissible under Libyan law.
“I'm sorry to say, but in the Middle East, it's all starting to be the
same,” he continued, warning that similar persecution of Christians has
also occurred in Egypt, Palestine and Lebanon.
The March 14 protest condemned the arrest and torture of dozens of
Egyptian Copts in Libya, as well as the death of one of the Christians,
Ezzat Hakim Atallah, on March 9 after ten days of torture at the hands
of Libya's Preventive Security department in Tripoli.
The protestors gathered in hopes of persuading authorities to free the
remaining prisoners who, according to a statement by the organizers,
were detained simply for “possessing Christian books for personal use.”
The event was organized by the group Coptic Solidarity and joined by
the Jubilee Campaign, an organization that seeks to pursue religious
freedom for persecuted Christians.
In a press release announcing the protest, Coptic Solidarity called on
Libyan authorities to release all Copts imprisoned in the country “under
the despicable and idiotic charges of proselytizing.”
They also criticized Egyptian government officials for “their failure to defend their fellow citizens.”
“In contrast,” the group added, the Egyptian “presidency and the
foreign ministry had enthusiastically rushed to defend a Muslim
Brotherhood cell that was arrested in the United Arab Emirates on
charges of threatening the country's national security.”
“The attitude of the Egyptian authorities in dealing with the Coptic citizens is shameful.”
The organization also called on international human rights groups to
push for investigations and an end to “the flagrant attacks on innocent
Copts in Libya.”
Kelly McLean of the Jubilee Campaign told CNA that one of the prisoners
was the owner of a bookshop in Benghazi that contained some Christian
books and humanitarian aid materials.
Previously, police had confiscated
a number of his books, but had allowed him to keep others, she said.
However, in early March, the shop owner was detained again on charges
of proselytization because “he had fewer books than the original
shipment,” leading the government to claim that he had been distributing
the books.
But in reality, McLean explained, the shortage of books was due to the fact that police had already confiscated some of them.
“It doesn't make any sense,” she said. “Honestly, if he was giving out
that many books, there would have been an issue before this latest
detention.”
“Hopefully in the future, we want to put pressure on the government to
not only abide by human rights standards, but to uphold their own
constitution, which allows freedom of religion,” she added.