FRI 22 - 11 - 2024
 
Date: Oct 26, 2011
Source: The Daily Star
Rights group: Egypt military may have covered up Christian deaths

AM By Maggie Michael
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CAIRO: An international rights group warned Tuesday that Egypt’s ruling generals may try to cover up the circumstances surrounding the killings of more than 20 Coptic Christian demonstrators when the military broke up their protest by force earlier this month.


Egypt’s ruling military council, which took power after the February ouster of Hosni Mubarak in a popular uprising, have portrayed the Oct. 9 protest and the ensuing bloodshed as the work of provocateurs, thereby shielding the soldiers present from any blame. A number of the Christian protesters were killed when military vehicles ran them over.


“The military has already tried to control the media narrative, and it should not be allowed to cover up what happened Oct. 9,” said New-York based Human Rights Watch spokesman Joe Stork.


The clashes left 27 people dead, at least 21 of them Christians, in the deadliest single incident since Mubarak’s ouster. After months of growing tensions between the youthful protesters that spearheaded the uprising and the ruling military, the killings brought relations between the two sides to a new low. Activists accuse the ruling military council of behaving like the old regime. The generals have been pressing for an end to street protests.


Egypt’s Christian minority, about 10 percent of the mostly Muslim population, has long complained of discrimination and second-class citizen treatment. However, attacks on Christians have significantly increased since the uprising.
The violence Oct. 9 began when about 1,000 Christians tried to stage a peaceful sit-in outside the state television building in the Maspero district along the Nile.


The protesters said they were attacked by “thugs” with sticks and the violence spiraled out of control after a speeding military vehicle jumped onto a sidewalk and crushed some Christians to death.


At a news conference after the clashes, the military tried to exonerate itself, blaming the Christians and “hidden hands” for starting the violence. They denied troops shot any protesters or intentionally ran them over.
The ruling council put military prosecutors in charge of investigating the killings.


However, HRW urged authorities to transfer investigation of the case from military to civilian prosecutors.
“The only hope for justice for the victims is an independent, civilian-led investigation that the army fully cooperates with and cannot control and that leads to the prosecution of those responsible,” the HRW statement said.
“The generals seem to be insisting that they and only they investigate the Maspero violence, which is to ensure that no serious investigation occurs.”


HRW also urged an investigation into whether the military manipulated the media and the state television coverage Oct. 9 which “may have amounted to incitement to violence.”


As protesters marched toward the TV building, state television called on viewers to rush to the army’s rescue, casting the Christians as a mob seeking to undermine unity between the people and the military.



 
Readers Comments (0)
Add your comment

Enter the security code below*

 Can't read this? Try Another.
 
Related News
Egyptian celeb faces backlash over photo with Israeli singer
Three Egyptian policemen, four militants killed in prison break attempt
Acting leader of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood arrested in Cairo
Egypt mulls law to protect women's identities as MeToo movement escalates
Egypt homeless, street children hit hard by pandemic scourge
Related Articles
Private-equity fund sparks entrepreneurial energy in Egypt
Young Egypt journalists know perils of seeking truth
What Sisi wants from Sudan: Behind his support for Bashir
Egypt’s lost academic freedom and research
Flour and metro tickets: Sisi’s futile solution to Egypt’s debt crisis
Copyright 2024 . All rights reserved