Editor in Chief
Youssef Sidhom
Watani
عربى English French
  • News
    • Accidents
    • Crime
    • Diplomatic briefcase
    • NewsLine
    • Outside Cairo
    • Special Occasions
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
    • International media
    • Reader`s Corner
    • Opinion
  • Politics
    • Elections
    • International Politics
    • Islamisation Politics
    • National Affairs
    • Parliament
    • Politics
    • Protests
    • Rights
    • Terrorism
  • Culture
    • Antiquity
    • Art
    • Books
    • Culture
    • Drama
    • Egyptology
    • Festivals
    • Films
    • Heritage
    • Islamisation Culture
    • Media
    • Museums
    • Music
    • TV
  • Coptic
    • Church Affairs
    • Coptic Affairs
    • Coptic Culture
    • Copts in the Media
    • Coptology
    • Copts Abroad
    • Religious
      • P. Shenouda: Bible Study
    • Sectarian
    • Inter-religious
    • Holy Family
  • Features
    • Counselling Corner
    • features
    • Economy
      • Business
    • Education
    • Social Issues
      • Behaviour
      • Mothers Day
    • Health
    • Environment
    • Humour
    • In memorial
    • Interviews
    • Nile
    • Profile
    • Special needs
    • Sports
    • Technology
    • Tourism
    • Wars
    • Women
    • Youth
  • Watani Special Features
    • Egypt – Arab Spring
      • 25 January Revolution
      • 25 Jan revolution, one year on
      • Egypt post-30 June
    • Watani Milestones
      • 20 years Watani International
      • 10 years Watani International
      • Watani Jubilee
    • Pope Shenouda
    • Pope Tawadros
    • Watani Forum
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Accidents
    • Crime
    • Diplomatic briefcase
    • NewsLine
    • Outside Cairo
    • Special Occasions
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
    • International media
    • Reader`s Corner
    • Opinion
  • Politics
    • Elections
    • International Politics
    • Islamisation Politics
    • National Affairs
    • Parliament
    • Politics
    • Protests
    • Rights
    • Terrorism
  • Culture
    • Antiquity
    • Art
    • Books
    • Culture
    • Drama
    • Egyptology
    • Festivals
    • Films
    • Heritage
    • Islamisation Culture
    • Media
    • Museums
    • Music
    • TV
  • Coptic
    • Church Affairs
    • Coptic Affairs
    • Coptic Culture
    • Copts in the Media
    • Coptology
    • Copts Abroad
    • Religious
      • P. Shenouda: Bible Study
    • Sectarian
    • Inter-religious
    • Holy Family
  • Features
    • Counselling Corner
    • features
    • Economy
      • Business
    • Education
    • Social Issues
      • Behaviour
      • Mothers Day
    • Health
    • Environment
    • Humour
    • In memorial
    • Interviews
    • Nile
    • Profile
    • Special needs
    • Sports
    • Technology
    • Tourism
    • Wars
    • Women
    • Youth
  • Watani Special Features
    • Egypt – Arab Spring
      • 25 January Revolution
      • 25 Jan revolution, one year on
      • Egypt post-30 June
    • Watani Milestones
      • 20 years Watani International
      • 10 years Watani International
      • Watani Jubilee
    • Pope Shenouda
    • Pope Tawadros
    • Watani Forum
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
Watani
ع Fr
ADVERTISEMENT

Problems on hold

15 December, 2011 - (9:05 AM)
0 0

Youssef Sidhom

9
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

WATANI International
17 January 2010

The shootout which targeted the Copts as they left church following Midnight Mass on Christmas Eve in the Upper Egyptian town of Nag Hammadi, is still reverberating shock waves inside and outside Egypt. Visitors to Nag Hammadi in the wake of the shootout came back with harrowing tales of the climate of terror and fear which envelops the Copts there. The bitter foreboding of evil is ever-present, not only among those who were directly hit by the shootout on Christmas Eve, but by mainstream Copts who can no longer feel secure about what tomorrow holds. Many lock themselves up in their homes, since the bitter reality witnesses to the fact that they may become the next victims. Not because they have done anything wrong, but for the mere fact that they are Copts, they may be targeted by persons they have never seen to settle accounts on issues they know nothing of.
Tales from Nag Hammadi testify first hand to the appalling climate of hatred which reigns there. Concepts such as the homeland, citizenship rights, safety or security, are put to shame before the prevailing hatred—the natural outcome of discriminative, divisive policies which insist on ‘religionising’ everything in our life, in favour of Islam and against Christianity.
A plethora of declarations, statements, and writings have strongly condemned the shootout against the Copts and the morbid climate which made it possible. This in itself is an encouraging indicator, but the question which begs an answer is whether all such talk will remain mere ‘condolence rhetoric’ or could materialise into real change.
Those sceptical of any change may be obviously excused for their wariness. Throughout the last four decades the State has refrained from implementing policies against the escalating religious fundamentalism which has gradually taken over Egypt on all religious, social cultural, educational, and political fronts.
Among the many statements issued by political parties and rights groups, the one by the National Council for Human Rights (NCHR) especially caught my attention, not least because the NCHR is a State entity that has long called for reform, full citizenship rights and equality among Egyptians. In unprecedented candour, the statement diagnosed the Egyptian illness and prescribed a cure, confirming that it will be presented to the president of the republic.
The NCHR strongly drew attention to the new type of terrorist operations executed by individuals who do not belong to regular sectarian or violent groups. This, the statement said, raises grave concerns about the political climate surrounding such criminal terrorists, their incentives and the identity of whoever is using them to destabilise our community and wreck the national fabric. The NCHR called for an iron-fisted policy against fanaticism and sectarianism, and for harsh penalties against criminals who target Copts, since such criminals have so far been meted none or very mild penalties. In this respect the NCHR said the law must rule over all indiscriminately; so-called reconciliation sessions should be no more than supplementary action to resolve problems and should never replace the law.
Victims of violence and terrorism should be indemnified for their losses by the government and the civil society organisations, the NCHR said. This should serve to consolidate citizenship concepts and equality. Moreover, officials concerned should be taken to account, no matter how high they rank. This, the statement said, confirms the need to apply selective measures to appoint the most able and experienced individuals for public office.
The NCHR stressed that it should be clearly confirmed that Egypt is a civil State based on citizenship rights. The media should stop transmitting material that promotes religionising the State or that deepens divisions between children of the homeland. Curricula and teacher attitude in schools should be monitored in order to stress that the homeland is not exclusive to any one group of Egyptians.
New legislation is required, the statement stressed, to criminalise discrimination and the promotion of hatred. A unified law for building places of worship should be passed, in confirmation of the constitutional texts which stipulate equality in freedom of expression, worship, and conducting religious rites.
The most important point about the NCHR statement is that it would be raised to President Mubarak. Previous statements and actions on citizenship rights and violence against Copts have frequently faltered while awaiting presidential action. Now that the situation has reached intolerable proportions, Copts are asking: Where is President Mubarak? Following the Nag Hammadi incident, Egypt—Muslims and Copts alike—looks up to President Mubarak for decisive action to heal the nation.

Comments

comments

Tags: holdProblems

Related Posts

Archive Articles


SAINTE CATHERINE LABOURÉ, Servante des pauvres


December 15, 2011
Archive Articles

Agenda

December 15, 2011
DJ Zebra au Caire
Archive Articles

DJ Zebra au Caire

December 15, 2011
Archive Articles

Au caire le président américain visite la mosquée du Sultan Hassan

December 15, 2011
Archive Articles

“Nouveau départ entre les musulmans et les États-Unis”

December 15, 2011
Archive Articles

Principales œuvres

December 15, 2011

Editorial

China and Russia vis-à-vis Trump’s Iran War

More

MOST READ

Egypt attempts to contain Myna bird invasion
Environment

Egypt attempts to contain Myna bird invasion

June 15, 2026
0

The Nature Protection Sector of Egypt’s Ministry of Local Development and Environment has been monitoring and tracking the spread of...

Read more
Watani talks to Anba Bigol, Bishop and Abbot of al-Muharraq Monastery of the Holy Virgin Mary

Watani talks to Anba Bigol, Bishop and Abbot of al-Muharraq Monastery of the Holy Virgin Mary

June 17, 2026
Egypt’s Armenians

Egypt’s Armenians

April 22, 2015
‘Train of Hope’ to carry home 1,200 Sudanese

‘Train of Hope’ to carry home 1,200 Sudanese

June 16, 2026
Jobs for persons with disabilities

Jobs for persons with disabilities

June 15, 2026

Features

China’s Long March launches USD190M tyre manufacturing project in Egypt
Economy

China’s Long March launches USD190M tyre manufacturing project in Egypt

June 17, 2026
0

China’s Chaoyang Long March Tyre Co., Ltd. has launched a USD190 million tyre manufacturing project in Egypt’s Suez Canal Economic...

Read more
Watani started as an Egyptian weekly Sunday newspaper published in Cairo. The word Watani is Arabic for “My Homeland”. The paper was founded in 1958 by the prominent Copt Antoun Sidhom (1915 – 1995), who strove for the establishment of a civil, democratic society in Egypt, where all Egyptians would enjoy full citizenship rights regardless of their religious denomination. To this day when Watani is published as a weekly paper and an online news site, the objective remains the same. Those in charge of Watani view this role as a patriotic all-Egyptian vocation. Special attention is given to shedding light on Coptic culture and tradition as authentically Egyptian, this being a topic largely disregarded or little-understood by Egypt’s media. Watani is deeply dedicated to offer its readers high quality, extensive, objective, credible and well-researched media coverage, with special focus on Coptic issues, culture, heritage, and contribution to Egyptian society.
-----------------------------------------------------------

27 Abdel Khalek Tharwat st, Downtown, Abdeen,Cairo

00202-23927201

00202-23935946

 [email protected]

      

categories

  • News
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Culture
  • Egypt – Arab Spring
  • Coptic Affairs
  • Features
  • Watani Special Features

Recent Posts

  • China and Russia vis-à-vis Trump’s Iran War
  • China’s Long March launches USD190M tyre manufacturing project in Egypt
  • Watani talks to Anba Bigol, Bishop and Abbot of al-Muharraq Monastery of the Holy Virgin Mary
  • ‘Train of Hope’ to carry home 1,200 Sudanese
  • Egypt launches ROX Motor partnership to manufacture new-energy vehicles
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Culture
  • Egypt – Arab Spring
  • Coptic Affairs
  • Features
  • Watani Special Features

Powered BY 3A Digital.

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Accidents
    • Crime
    • Diplomatic briefcase
    • NewsLine
    • Outside Cairo
    • Special Occasions
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
    • International media
    • Reader`s Corner
    • Opinion
  • Politics
    • Elections
    • International Politics
    • Islamisation Politics
    • National Affairs
    • Parliament
    • Politics
    • Protests
    • Rights
    • Terrorism
  • Culture
    • Antiquity
    • Art
    • Books
    • Culture
    • Drama
    • Egyptology
    • Festivals
    • Films
    • Heritage
    • Islamisation Culture
    • Media
    • Museums
    • Music
    • TV
  • Coptic
    • Church Affairs
    • Coptic Affairs
    • Coptic Culture
    • Copts in the Media
    • Coptology
    • Copts Abroad
    • Religious
      • P. Shenouda: Bible Study
    • Sectarian
    • Inter-religious
    • Holy Family
  • Features
    • Counselling Corner
    • features
    • Economy
      • Business
    • Education
    • Social Issues
      • Behaviour
      • Mothers Day
    • Health
    • Environment
    • Humour
    • In memorial
    • Interviews
    • Nile
    • Profile
    • Special needs
    • Sports
    • Technology
    • Tourism
    • Wars
    • Women
    • Youth
  • Watani Special Features
    • Egypt – Arab Spring
      • 25 January Revolution
      • 25 Jan revolution, one year on
      • Egypt post-30 June
    • Watani Milestones
      • 20 years Watani International
      • 10 years Watani International
      • Watani Jubilee
    • Pope Shenouda
    • Pope Tawadros
    • Watani Forum

Powered BY 3A Digital.

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In