Friday, March 2, 2012

Egypt: Christian man jailed for 6 years for "contempt of religion," insulting Muhammad

From Jihad Watch:

Note to Readers:  Specific incidents of Muslim persecution of Christians are in my blog:  A New Synaxarium of Christian Martyrs.  I have already covered this there.


Egypt: Christian man jailed for 6 years for "contempt of religion," insulting Muhammad

There is an alarming similarity of practices developing between East and West, which groups like the OIC are exploiting to their purpose: the criminalization of hurt feelings, but only hurt feelings of a certain approved pedigree. "Egypt Christian man jailed for insulting Prophet," by Joseph Mayton for Bikya Masr, March 1:
CAIRO: Egypt has jailed a Christian man for 6 years on charges of showing contempt of religion and insulting the Prophet Mohamed, the country’s state-owned al-Ahram newspaper reported on Thursday.
The court, in the southern Egyptian province of Assiut, said that Makram Diab, a school employee, had made offensive remarks against Islam’s prophet, according to the report.
The remarks infuriated Diab’s Muslim colleagues, who went on strike until he was arrested and prosecuted.
The sentencing comes after a Cairo court earlier this week dismissed a lawsuit against the Christian business tycoon, Naguib Sawiris, who was accused of insulting Islam by tweeting images of Mickey Mouse with a beard and his counterpart Minnie wearing a veil.
Sawiris faces two other lawsuits over the same images.
Recent parliamentary elections have produced a strong showing for Islamists in Egypt, sparking concerns over freedom among liberals and Christians, who make up around 10 percent of the country’s 80 million population.
The ruling has left the Coptic community angered over what a number of Christian activists told Bikyamasr.com was an “attempt to create divisions” between Muslims and Christians in the country.
Noha, a political studies student at Cairo University and activist who regularly participates in demonstrations for Coptic rights, argued that the government is “continuing the policy of Mubarak by jailing and even putting these people in front of a court. It is unacceptable for a country where we hoped for free speech.”...

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