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Africa North
Muslim, Christian leaders seek to calm violence in Egypt
2013-04-09
Life would be easier for Mursi if the dhimmis just knew their place...
CAIRO — A second Egyptian died on Monday of wounds sustained in clashes at Cairo’s Coptic cathedral the previous day in an outbreak of sectarian violence that the government and Muslim and Christian leaders sought to calm.

A security source said a 21-year-old Muslim man, named only as Mohamed, died of a fractured skull in hospital after fighting between local Muslims and Copts who had been attending a funeral for four Christians shot dead in a town near Cairo on Friday.

The health ministry said at least 90 people, including 11 policemen, were wounded around the cathedral in one of the worst sectarian flare-ups since the fall of autocratic president Hosni Mubarak in 2011.

Prime Minister Hisham Kandil said the government was taking all measures to protect the safety of Egyptians of all faiths, promising to bring to justice the perpetrators of sectarian attacks and to crack down on unlicenced weapons. He also spoke to the heads of the Coptic church and of the Al Azhar institution to discuss ways to resolve the crisis and prevent any repetition, a cabinet statement said.

Muslim and Christian religious leaders appeared together on late-night television to call for calm and national unity after the clashes around St. MarkÂ’s Cathedral, headquarters of the Coptic church, which raged for several hours on Sunday.

Muslims pelted Christians sheltering in the church compound with petrol bombs and rocks after angry young Copts leaving the funeral service chanted slogans against President Mohammed Mursi and his Muslim Brotherhood movement.

Witnesses accused the police of standing by as the Copts were attacked and of firing teargas at mourners in the compound as they emerged from the cathedral under a hail of rocks. But a statement posted on the Interior MinistryÂ’s website on Sunday evening blamed Christians for starting the violence by vandalising several cars.

“As the procession passed Ramses Street, some of the mourners destroyed a number of cars which led to clashes and tensions with the area’s residents and (we) are currently intervening to separate the groups,” it said.

Mursi telephoned Coptic Orthodox Pope Tawadros II on Sunday evening to condemn the violence, telling him that “any attack on the cathedral is like an attack on me personally”, the state news agency Mena reported. Mursi ordered an investigation and sent his interior minister to the scene.

Debris-strewn streets around the cathedral were quiet on Monday morning with riot police blocking access. The wreckage of at least two burned-out cars and a carpet of bricks and stones littered the street that had been the main battlefield until late on Sunday evening.

The Muslim BrotherhoodÂ’s spiritual leader, Mohamed Badie, said in a statement on the movementÂ’s website that the attack on Christians in the town of El Khusus was alien to all Egyptians. He blamed the violence not on Muslim radicals but on unnamed forces seeking to divide Egypt.
Posted by:Steve White

#2  Good luck getting people to ease up on the violence. It's what crappy third-world dictatorships use to keep people calm.....

While the west sells warnings and options.
Posted by: Besoeker   2013-04-09 07:24  

#1  Good luck getting people to ease up on the violence. It's what crappy third-world dictatorships use to keep people calm.
Posted by: gorb   2013-04-09 02:30  

00:00