Speaking to AsiaNews, sources,
anonymous for security reasons, relayed some of the more tragic stories involving
anti-Christian attacks unleashed by the Muslim Brotherhood starting on 14
August, including the story of a taxi driver who was beheaded in Alexandria for
being a Christian; those of policemen mercilessly killed, their bodies publicly
defiled in Kerdasa (Giza); or the fate of entire villages devastated and left without
food in Minya Governatorate.
In such incidents, dozens of people were killed, at
least 58 churches were destroyed, and 162 homes and shops were wrecked. Hovering
over all this is the daily threat of more attacks and kidnappings.
According to
sources, the recent arrest of Muslim Brotherhood leaders has unleashed the
violence of their followers many times over. The latter no longer just attack
and harass their victims but deliberately and in a premeditated way kill them.
On 21 August, a
militia group associated with the Brotherhood laid siege to a local police
station in Kerdasa (Giza). When the terrorists stormed the building, they
showered the agents with a hail of bullets, petrol bombs and rockets. To
terrorise local residents, they dragged the bodies of the dead officers into
the street and urinated on them, shouting "Islam, Islam."
In Minya Governorate
(Upper Egypt) and other parts of the country, sources describe an atmosphere of
fear and tensions that has lasted for weeks with Copts, Catholics and
Protestants living amid constant threats and threats of attacks.
In view of the
situation, many families have turned their homes into fortresses; others have simply
abandoned their villages.
Yesterday, at
Saft el-Laban (Minya) a group of Islamic extremists again attacked Coptic homes
and shops, spreading terror in the population.
In an appeal, the
Coptic Patriarch Tawadros II slammed the violence, calling on Muslims to help
their Christian brothers. "Let us pray the One God, worshiped by Egyptians of all
faiths, that He may shield our homeland from terrorism and violence."
For the sources,
"The stories victims tell about attacks are frightening and weigh heavily on
the hearts of Egyptians."
One attack
involved taxi driver Rafaat Aziz Mina, who was slaughtered in an Alexandria
street just because he was Christian. In his early twenties, he was killed on 16
August by a mob of Islamists who took to the streets after news reached them
about the military's action against their camps in Cairo.
An amateur video shot by
a resident shows a mob blocking cars, checking the passengers inside. When Aziz's
taxi was stopped, one of the protesters noted a cross hanging from the rear
view mirror. Quickly, the young man was dragged out and kicked, punched and
beaten to death. For several minutes, the extremists defiled the lifeless body kicking
and spitting on it, concluding their performance by cutting off his head, which
they left on the sidewalk.
Other stories
describe what happened between 14 and 17 August in Minya (Upper Egypt), the
area most affected by the Islamist fury. Here, where extremists devastated almost every
church, a sense of siege continues to prevail.
"In one small village,
islamists stabbed a 30 times Christian man who was trying to put out one of the
many fires set in the local church," sources said. "The man survived but is in
hospital in intensive care."
In Deir Muwass, also
in Minya, 30 armed Islamists attacked the local water station and destroyed
facilities supplying water to the villages. This means that residents will not
be able to stop fire in case of new arson attacks.
In Assiut, also in
Upper Egypt, residents are doing everything possible to help members of the
local Protestant church devastated by Islamists. Christians said that a local Protestant
clergyman and his wife were abducted.
"Acts of violence,
kidnappings and attacks are so numerous that it is almost impossible to keep
track," sources said.
Even big
institutions like the Bibliotheca Alexandrina have
not been spared.
On 16 August during a demonstration organised by Islamists, a
group of extremists broke off from the march and headed towards the library, which
is among the most famous in the world, set on burning it.
The group was
able to get into the library's courtyard where they were met by security guards.
In the gunfight that ensued, several people were wounded.
According to Khaled Azab, head of the library's Media Department, Islamists devastated
the conference centre and broke glass panes in the plaza.