Showing posts with label Egypt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Egypt. Show all posts

Saturday, November 01, 2014

Egyptian Court Sentences Men In Gay Wedding Party To 3 Years In Prison

AP reports tht in Egypt today, 8 men who were shown in an Internet video as part of a same-sex wedding party were each sentenced to 3 years in prison for "inciting debauchery."  According to AP:
The verdict is the latest in a crackdown by authorities against gays and atheists. The campaign also targets liberal and pro-democracy activists and violators of a draconian law on street protests.
(See prior related posting.)

Monday, September 08, 2014

Egypt Arrests 7 Who Appeared In Video Of Same-Sex Wedding

AlJazeera yesterday  reported that Egypt has arrested seven men on charges of inciting debauchery and publishing indecent images after a video of them taking part in the country's first same-sex wedding went viral on social media.  The wedding took place last April, but went viral in August. Authorities identified 9 of the 16 people in the video, and arrested 7 of them. Those arrested were remanded in custody for up to four days, and "medical tests" of the men were ordered.

Sunday, August 10, 2014

Egyptian Court Dissolves Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party

In Egypt yesterday, the Supreme Administrative Court ordered dissolution of the Freedom and Justice Party, the political wing of the Muslim Brotherhood. Reuters and BBC News report that the decision, which excludes the party from running candidates in future elections, calls for seizure of the party's assets by the state. The government's Committee of Political Party Affairs had accused the FJP of irregularities. Among other things, police found that the party's headquarters had been used to store weapons. The court's decision may not be appealed. FJP's parent Muslim Brotherhood was banned and its assets were confiscated by court order last year. (See prior posting.)

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Egyptian Appeals Court Imposes Jail Sentence On Teacher For Allegedly Insulting Islam

In Egypt on Sunday, a appellate court sentenced a 23-year old Coptic Christian elementary school teacher to 6 months in jail for insulting Islam.  According to Arutz Sheva, the head of the parents' association at a Luxor school filed a complaint last May against teacher Demiana Emad claiming that she told her students that the late Coptic pope Shenuda III was better than the Prophet Mohammed. However an Egyptian civil rights group says she only presented a lesson in comparative religion. A trial court had imposed a fine equivalent to approximately $14,000 (US) on the teacher.  Both she and the state appealed, and the appellate court imposed the heavier sentence. Apparently an additional appeal can still be filed.

Saturday, June 07, 2014

Egyptian Government Decree Bars Unapproved Imams From Preaching Publicly

Reuters reports that today the Egyptian government issued a decree allowing only state approved clerics to preach in mosques or other public places:
According to the decree, "only designated specialists at the Ministry of Religious Endowments and authorized preachers from al-Azhar shall be permitted to practice public preaching and religious lessons in mosques or similar public places."
Only al-Azhar officials and graduates as well preachers from the ministry or the grand mufti's office will be allowed to wear the trademark "turban" - a red hat with a white cloth band - and robes that designate an al-Azhar cleric, it said.
Unauthorized preachers face fines jail terms up to a year and fines up to 50,000 Egyptian pounds ($7,000). Wearing or denigrating al-Azhar garments in any way will carry similar penalties, it added.
The decree is another step in the government's attempt to prevent mosques from being used as recruiting grounds for Islamist political parties.

Saturday, April 26, 2014

Article Recounts Continued Lack of Religious Freedom In Egypt

Today's New York Times carried a front-page article titled Vow of Freedom of Religion Goes Unkept in Egypt. Here are some excerpts:
The architects of the military takeover in Egypt promised a new era of tolerance and pluralism when they deposed President Mohamed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood last summer.
Nine months later, though, Egypt’s freethinkers and religious minorities are still waiting for the new leadership to deliver on that promise. Having suppressed Mr. Morsi’s Islamist supporters, the new military-backed government has fallen back into patterns of sectarianism that have prevailed here for decades.
Prosecutors continue to jail Coptic Christians, Shiite Muslims and atheists on charges of contempt of religion..... The military leader behind the takeover, Abdul-Fattah el-Sisi, often appeals to the Muslim majority in a language of shared piety....
... But the complaints about continued sectarianism have not deterred church leaders from firmly supporting Mr. Sisi as their protector against worse treatment by the Muslim majority.

Tuesday, January 07, 2014

Egyptian President Visits Coptic Pope To Extend Greetings For Orthodox Christmas, Celebrated Today

Today, Orthodox Christians, including the Coptic Christian community in Egypt, celebrate Christmas. (As explained by Al Ahram, the difference in dates from Western Christianity results from continued use of the Julian calendar by Orthodox Christians.) According to Catholic News Service, on Sunday Egypt's interim President Adly Mansour visited Coptic Pope Tawadros II at the papal seat in St. Mark's Coptic Orthodox Cathedral in Cairo to personally extend Christmas greetings and appreciation to the Coptic community which has continued to suffer attacks since the military takeover of the government. This is the first visit of an Egyptian president to the Cathedral in over 40 years.

Thursday, December 26, 2013

Egyptian Cabinet Declares Muslim Brotherhood a "Terrorist" Group

Ahram Online reports that yesterday Egypt's Cabinet officially designated the Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist group, making it subject to Article 86 of the Egyptian penal code. According to the Washington Post, this means that hundreds of charities and non-governmental organizations affiliated with the Brotherhood will be closed down, and anyone who belongs to the Brotherhood, promotes it or funds it, will be subject to prosecution. The move comes in the wake of Tuesday's bombing of the Daqahliya security directorate in the city of Mansoura which many blame on the Brotherhood despite claims of responsibility from the Islamist militant group Ansar Beit Al-Maqdis. Some legal experts say that the terrorist designation may face legal problems on appeal, arguing that it is only the judiciary or the interim President who holds temporary legislative powers, not the Cabinet, that could make such a declaration.

The Washington Post calls yesterday's developments "a stunning turnaround for the decades-old Islamist organization, which rose to the height of political power in 2012 with the election of Mohamed Morsi — a former Brotherhood leader — as president in Egypt’s first open democratic election."

UPDATE: AP reports that on Thursday, the government arrested a number of Muslim Brotherhood members, froze the assets of 1,000 charities and NGO's linked to the Brotherhood, placed 100 Brotherhood schools under government supervision and warned that holding a leadership post in the Muslim Brotherhood could be grounds for the death penalty.

UPDATE 2: The New York Times (Dec. 26) reports:
After widespread confusion and concern about the funds cutoff, in particular, government officials partly reversed course on Thursday night, saying that the organizations whose funds had been frozen — more than a thousand of them — would be allowed access to money to continue operating.

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Egyptian Government Forces Seize Al Azhar

PressTV reports that in Cairo, Egypt yesterday, security forces of the army-backed Egyptian government took control of all buildings and dormitories at Al Azhar University, apparently in order to crack down on student activists.   Al Azhar is the chief center of Sunni Islamic learning in the country.

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

House Hearing Focuses On Human Rights Concerns of Copts In Egypt.

Yesterday two subcommittees of the U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee held a joint hearing on Human Rights Abuses in Egypt. Taking place on Human Rights Day, the hearing focused particularly on the plight of the Coptic Christian minority in Egypt.  Video of the hearings and the full text of prepared statements by the five witnesses who testified are available on the Committee's website.