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Egypt Church Explosion: Injuries Reported After Blast Outside New Year's Mass

BY MAGGIE MICHAEL   12/31/10 09:57 PM ET   AP

Egypt Attack

CAIRO — A car exploded in front of a Coptic Christian church as worshippers emerged from a New Year's Mass in the Egyptian city of Alexandria early Saturday, killing at least seven people, officials said.

After the blast, enraged Christians emerging from the church clashed with police and stormed a nearby mosque, prompting fights and volleys of stone throwing with Muslims, police and witnesses said – a sign of the sectarian anger that has been arising with greater frequency in Egypt.

Nearly 1,000 Christians were attending the Mass at the Saints Church in the Mediterranean port city of Alexandria, said a priest at the church, Father Mena Adel. The service had just ended, and worshippers were leaving the building when the blast went off, about a half-hour after midnight.

"I was inside the church and heard a huge explosion," Adel told The Associated Press. "People's bodies were in flames."

The blast came from a car parked outside the church, but police said they were still investigating whether the car had been rigged with explosives or if a bomb had been placed under it. Witnesses reported seeing the charred chassis of the destroyed car, with the remains of several bodies nearby and dozens wounded.

The Interior Ministry said in a statement that seven people were killed and 24 wounded. Alexandria's governor, Adel Labib, put the death toll as high as 10.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the blast. Labib immediately blamed al-Qaida, pointing to recent threats by the terror group's branch in Iraq to attack Christians. It was not clear, however, if Labib had firm evidence, and he may have intended more to deny any homegrown Muslim-Christian tensions in Egypt.

"The al-Qaida organization threatened to attack churches inside Egypt. This has nothing to do with sectarianism," he told state TV.

After the explosion, some Christians from the church clashed with police in anger over the blast. The Christians hurled stones at police and a nearby mosque, chanting, "With our blood and soul, we redeem the cross," the witnesses said.

An AP photographer at the scene said the protesters stormed into the mosque, throwing books inside out onto the street. The protest sparked clashes with Muslims, as both sides began throwing stones and bottles at each other in the streets.

The attack comes at a time of rising sectarian tension in Egypt and the broader region. In November, hundreds of Christians rioted in the capital, Cairo, smashing cars and windows after police violently stopped the construction of a church. The rare outbreak of Christian unrest in the capital left one person dead.

Christians are believed to make up about 10 percent of Egypt's mainly Muslim population of nearly 80 million people, and they have grown increasingly vocal in complaints about discrimination. There have been occasional attacks targeting Christians – most notably, in January 2009, seven Christians were killed in a drive-by shooting on a church in southern Egypt during celebrations for the Orthodox Coptic Christmas. The Saints Church in Alexandria targeting early Saturday also came under attack in April 2006, when a man with a knife stabbed worshippers.

At the same time, al-Qaida-linked militants have carried out a campaign of attacks against Christians in Iraq, killing 68 in a church siege in October and two more Christians in attacks in Baghdad on Thursday.

The attacks in Iraq have an unusual connection to Egypt. Al-Qaida in Iraq says it is carrying out the campaign of anti-Christian attacks in the name of two Egyptian Christian women who reportedly converted to Islam in order to get divorces from their husbands. The Coptic Church forbids almost all divorce, meaning leaving the religion is sometimes the only option to escape an abusive or unhappy marriage.

The two women have since been secluded with Coptic Church authorities. Islamic hard-liners in Egypt have held frequent protests in past months, accusing the Church of imprisoning the women and forcing them to renounce Islam and return to Christianity.

Al-Qaida in Iraq says it is carrying out attacks on Christians in that country until Egyptian Church officials release the two women. The Church denies holding the women against their will.

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CAIRO — A car exploded in front of a Coptic Christian church as worshippers emerged from a New Year's Mass in the Egyptian city of Alexandria early Saturday, killing at least seven people, offic...
CAIRO — A car exploded in front of a Coptic Christian church as worshippers emerged from a New Year's Mass in the Egyptian city of Alexandria early Saturday, killing at least seven people, offic...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
syntax facit saltum
We do not live in a 2 story universe
05:32 AM on 01/05/2011
Here is an excellent article on the bombings which includes and in-depth analysis of the situation by Al-Jazeera: http://ricochet.com/main-feed/The-Alexandria-Bombing-Useless-and-Useful-Questions
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
merrymay
08:03 AM on 01/04/2011
Small time persecution of the KKK sort has been going on in South Egypt a long time. Very little western press cared. You had to get the information outside the MSMedia here. Those lovers of "McTruth" also never bother to mention that southern Sudan is mostly Christian.

Murder is murder, period. This will really hurt tourism in Egypt...which is probably the motive. The fanatics hate that...look up what they have done in Algeria.
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FTracy3
My micro-bio is as empty as the rest of my life.
03:00 PM on 01/03/2011
More evidence of Christianiphobia and hate crimes. And you can throw around the "all religions are the same' charge but as far as I know there aren't too many societies that advocate punishment including the death penalty for converting from Christianity. And the article above does call an incident of rioting as "a rare incident of Christian unrest." Wouldn't it be nice if violence were rare in the name of certain other faiths.
08:24 PM on 01/03/2011
Islamophobia is a lot more rampant today - does the former US president's call for a crusade ring a bell? The illegal killing of thousands of innocents till today? When your "outrage" is balanced towards all who are victims of violence, your words will ring more true.
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cdncommentator
08:40 PM on 01/03/2011
While I condemn any discrimination and fear-mongering, you must realize that there are valid and understandable reasons for islamophobia, such as the steady stream of terrorist plots, accomplished or stopped in mid-track, all done, purportedly, in the name of Islam. When for the first time in your life, you think twice about going to a Christmas tree lighting in the town square for fear of being too close to a suicide bomber who loves death more than life, it's not hard to have fear of a religion many say values death for Allah than the sanctity of life on earth.

Compared to the relatively restrained feelings of non-Muslims in the West (there haven't been any big riots or a rash of murders, have there?), there is rampant anti-Semitism and anti-Christian feelings in the Muslim world. This is evident not only in the press, but in riots, churches bombed and set on fire, communities displaced, etc.

So instead of complaining of Islamophobia, why don't you help your community fight the radicalism and prejudice and racism well tolerated in the Muslim community today?

You could be a light unto others.
05:52 AM on 01/04/2011
Please look in a mirror ammsamm and see what we see. It isn't pretty.
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10:26 AM on 01/03/2011
Egypt became a muslim majority country 600 years after the muslim invasion of egypt

SIX HUNDRED YEARS AFTER
02:35 AM on 01/03/2011
CalMelsmael, persecution ... well, let's just say I wouldn't look forward to being a Copt in Egypt . Bombings are recent but there has been a second class status for Copts and pressure to convert in different situations. The Coptic Pope had to apologize for a bishop who didn't do anything wrong. Living under police emergency law is awful. I wish nothing but goodwill and peace for the people in Egypt. There is a hardline group who do not care to coexist with their Egyptian Copt brothers or any other Christians living in the ME. I just wonder what would happen if Pres. Murbarak was replaced. When Tyrant Saddam was replaced the hardliners became more powerful which is resulting in Christians under siege. Would it be a replay of what's happening there? Lip service -we are all one- but afraid to really tackle the Islamic hardliners who are against this What exactly do they want? In my mind, I think they want everyone to be Muslim and convert. I could be completely wrong because my knowledge is limited..We live in a time where belief in God is declining and believers are ridiculed as superstitious. People in Egypt are great believers in God and people of faith. Those who love God should be left in peace to worship and give praise Him anywhere and anytime. I think we both are in full agreement on that. Peace.
01:35 AM on 01/03/2011
Am sure Christians are the only religion with problems.........
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
syntax facit saltum
We do not live in a 2 story universe
01:11 AM on 01/03/2011
I am very much favorably impressed by the widespread Muslim denunciation of this attack on the Egyptian Coptic community. And it is denunciation at the individual level and at governmental levels as well.
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02:06 PM on 01/03/2011
Hear, hear.
05:36 PM on 01/03/2011
yes, but many in Egypt are in denial and saying it must have been the work of Mossad or foreigners...including some of the very clerics who have been whipping up hate of Coptics for decades. This attack was a long time coming, and there will be more until some influential clerics will tell their followers that Christians have every right to live and practice their faith in Egypt. Unfortunately, this will never happen.

"Yusuf al-Qardawi [sic], President of World Union of Muslim Scholars, joined other Islamic leaders yesterday in condemning the attacks, and also in pointing the finger of blame at an unknown foreign hand. He didn't go so far as to say that the Zionists were behind it, but he did say that it didn't make sense for a Muslim to be behind it. (See the original Arabic here.)
Al-Qaradawi: Those Behind the Alexandria Bombing Are Criminals and Blood-Shedders; Islam Is Innocent of Them
...He pointed to the possibility of a foreign hand being behind the attack, with the purpose of igniting sectarian strife in Egypt, stating: "I fear that there may be a foreign hand behind this action, for it does not make sense for an Egyptian or a Muslim to be behind it. Perhaps a foreign hand is attempting to ignite sectarian strife."
08:18 PM on 01/03/2011
That makes sense. If you ever lived in Egypt you'd know that respect is mutual - Coptic Christians have a strong faith in God just like Muslims, which is a lot more than can be said of most Westerners today.
12:55 AM on 01/03/2011
This is yet another horrible act of violence of one group against another in the name of religious differences.
This attack could be to settle a personal dispute between parties who know each other or it could be an attack against unknown people because of religiou difference. we don't know the details but either way it is disgusting.
This is proof that religion does not satisfy the empty void in many people's lives.
They only the frustration and develop hate for something that cannot satisfy their hunger for justifying their existance.
There is no proof for or against God.
All religions must acknowledge that they are not reality. And that they are all the same.
02:59 PM on 01/03/2011
And in that vein, ALL atheists must acknowledge that other people have as great a right to the validity of their belief systems and their rights to believe in what they choose as they themselves have the right and are equally valid their denial of "religion".

This attack was by a terrorist organization attacking people who are different from them. The very same organization attacks many groups even those with whom they have no religious differences due to their desire for political power the lack of respect for human life of anyone who disagrees with them on the smallest matter, from matters as small as how blue the sky is.

Every action taken by a terrorist group in the name of religion, is not an excuse to bash religion in general. Just as any action taken by a secular organization for reasons that have nothing to do with religion are not the work of atheists.

The frustration and hate people feel are not religious in nature, they are cultural and social. There are many people who possess not religion who are quite frustrated and hateful on their own. One's belief system or lack thereof does not determine this.
08:19 PM on 01/03/2011
Great post.
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cdncommentator
03:09 PM on 01/05/2011
I think that when a heinous act is carried out in the name of some religion, principle, nation etc., it is proper to debate such a claim, to investigate it, and for the people associated with that religion, principle, nation, etc. to come out and distance themselves from such a claim.

If someone from Canada murdered an American on behalf of all Canadians, and doing his Canadian duty, you can bet that there'd be a lot of people coming forward to denounce his actions and repeat over and over again that murder is not a Canadian duty and that this insane person did not commit his crime in the name of Canada.

If Canadians were mute, then I would expect people from around the world to criticize Canada, Canadians, and probe into the Canadian belief system.

If there were a lot of Canadians and others killing Americans and others merely for their citizenship, I think a lot of people would ask whether nationhood is a good thing or a bad thing, and whether it breeds violence. Those are responsible questions to ask. The answer might be no, or it depends, or whatever, but we wouldn't know the answer unless we ask the question.

What we see in the Muslim world today, coupled with our memories of what life was like in the west when religion held more sway naturally lead people to ask whether religion itself is inherently oppressive, evil and violent. That's an important debate to have.
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fairwayhill
1948 Palestine belongs to the Palestinians
12:01 AM on 01/03/2011
The US should stop supporting the Egyptian dictatorsh­ip and support democratic eIections in Egypt.
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07:48 AM on 01/03/2011
And what happens if someone the US does not like is elected?

The US would rather have a dictator puppet. Murderous Pinochet, the Shah of Iran...Mubarek...even Saddam Hussein--until he stopped doing what the US told him to do -- all come to mind.
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02:06 PM on 01/03/2011
The world needs to listen to you.
08:21 PM on 01/03/2011
Exactly. Americans know nothing of reality - they think their government is some kind of Father Xmas model, spreading equality and justice to all.
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12:25 PM on 01/03/2011
Yeah, Lets create another Iraq!!!!!!!!!!!!!! That worked out great didn't it?????????
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rougebaisers
06:37 PM on 01/02/2011
Religions. Abominations.
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negogato
Strengthen the Nation with Equal Education.
09:38 PM on 01/02/2011
Yup
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
syntax facit saltum
We do not live in a 2 story universe
11:15 PM on 01/02/2011
Official state atheism. bloodbaths.
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02:07 PM on 01/03/2011
Different than the Inquisition?
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01:33 AM on 01/04/2011
Oh, but that only goes for Eastern Atheism, not Western Atheism, and certainly not Reformed Gnu Western Atheism.
And besides, the Eastern Atheist's weren't real true Atheists anyway.
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Amryxx
politeness rules, but with sharpened edges
04:20 PM on 01/02/2011
This is a horrible thing that needs to be condemned in the strongest terms.

I am glad though, that at the very least, Mubarak called for inter-religious unity rather than becoming a demogogue.
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03:53 PM on 01/02/2011
Ten Christians were killed by a car bomb in Egypt and 19 Muslims were killed by a US drone in Pakistan. 
The Christians responded by storming a mosque.  The Muslims responded by..........
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
syntax facit saltum
We do not live in a 2 story universe
01:01 AM on 01/03/2011
The Christians were Egyptian. Why should they be responsible for what the US government does? And according to Al-Jazeera 21 people were killed. http://english.aljazeera.net/news/middleeast/2011/01/201112101933637362.html

According to Al-Jazeera: "he targets were Coptic Christians, who responded with fury to the overnight attack, marching on a nearby mosque where they clashed with police." According to that report, they did not attack the mosque, rather they rioted there. http://english.aljazeera.net/video/middleeast/2011/01/201111163020636207.html
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09:21 AM on 01/03/2011
Let me clarify--my statement was intended to show the similarity between the two events.  If you wish to nit-pick, let's just say that at least nineteen people were killed in each. 

The response of the Christians was to react violently; why would one expect that the Muslims will not do the same? 

IIMO, your response to my post with the question " Why should the (Copts) be responsible for what the US government does"?  is a clear example of how mis-communication occurs.  as there was nothing in my post to suggest that there is a link between the US government and the Copts.
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03:28 PM on 01/02/2011
Thanks a lot, kuffar. "Danish attack plot suspect in previous arrests," by Nina Larson for AFP, December 31 (thanks to David):

http://www.jihadwatch.org/2010/12/swedish-secret-service-got-munir-awad-freed-from-somali-jail----and-he-repaid-them-by-joining-jihad.html

Sweden got Munir Awad freed from Somali jail -- he showed his gratitude by joining jihad plot against Danish newspaper
01:55 PM on 01/02/2011
I condemn all acts of violence towards my Coptic brothers and sisters in Egypt.

One does wonder, though, what the world reaction would be if two Muslim women converted to Christianity and were imprisoned for months by their community. All I hear is silence regarding the two women who converted to Islam and have not been heard or seen since.
05:20 PM on 01/02/2011
They could have been killed for apostasy?

"The Mohammed Hegazy case, shows the huge problems in that country for those wishing to leave Islam and be recognised as a member of another religion — where Hegazy has suffered death threats from family and prominent Islamic figures alike. A Judge ruled "He (Hegazy) can believe whatever he wants in his heart, but on paper he can't convert."

In February 2009, Maher Ahmad El-Mo’otahssem Bellah El-Gohary, whose effort to officially convert to Christianity, faced opposing lawyers who advocated he be convicted of "apostasy," and sentenced to death.

"Our rights in Egypt, as Christians or converts, are less than the rights of animals," El-Gohary said. "We are deprived of social and civil rights, deprived of our inheritance and left to the fundamentalists to be killed. Nobody bothers to investigate or care about us."

El-Gohary, 56, has been attacked in the street, spat at and knocked down in his effort to win the right to officially convert. He said he and his 14-year-old daughter continue to receive death threats by text message and phone call.[81]

In 1992 Islamist militants gunned down Egyptian secularist Farag Foda. Before his death he had been declared an apostate and foe of Islam. During the trial of the murderers, Azhari scholar Muhammad al-Ghazali testified that when the state fails to punish apostates, somebody else has to do it.[82]"

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apostasy_in_Islam
05:26 PM on 01/02/2011
You still haven't answered the question: What of the two Christian women who have converted to Islam and have been imprisoned by their community for months now? Where is the outrage??? Hypocrisy at it's finest.
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10:13 AM on 01/03/2011
what ammsamm is refering to is that conversion works both ways, as the story of the two chrisitan women illustrates:

the women abandoned christianity and converted to islam, the copts rioted, claiming the women were kidnapped by muslims, the issue was sensitive because the women were married to coptic priests... the government found and arrested the women "for their wn protection" then handed them over to the church which has moved them to an undisclosed location (most suspect a desert monastery) for "reeducation"
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
syntax facit saltum
We do not live in a 2 story universe
01:06 AM on 01/03/2011
Could it be the women are afraid that they would be killed for abandoning Islam and they are in hiding? My understanding is there are different Muslim positions on apostasy. In any case, it doesn't say the women were imprisoned. Rather, it said that Muslims had accused the Coptic church of imprisoning them.
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10:12 AM on 01/03/2011
the women abandoned christianity and converted to islam, the copts rioted, claiming the women were kidnapped by muslims, the issue was sensitive because the women were married to coptic priests... the government found and arrested the women "for their wn protection" then handed them over to the church which has moved them to an undisclosed location (most suspect a desert monastery) for "reeducation"