Welcome to Welcome to Mission Rescue Evangelistic Network!

     Modules
· Home
· Downloads
· FAQ
· Prayer Request
· Publications
· Recommend Us
· Search
· Statistics
· Sumit News
· Surveys
· Testimonies Archive
· Your Account

     Who's Online
There are currently, 1 guest(s) and 0 member(s) that are online.

You are Anonymous user. You can register for free by clicking here

     Languages
Select Interface Language:


Welcome to Mission Rescue Evangelistic Network main site area.

Africa is an open wound to the World's conscience. Save a soul with the gospel of Jesus Christ today! Support missions to the unreached groups.
Help the Helpless!
Congratulations!
You have entered the main site area where you can be vitally involved with what God is doing around the world through this mission.  
If you you have not yet registered to use this site and make valuable contributions please you can do so by clicking HERE.

You can then freely contribute your articles, share your testimonies and mission victories within the community.Fill free to participate in our polls and surveys as this will help us in our work.

If you you will like to invite the mission to carry out an evangelistic program in your area you can do so here.
To go back to the public area of the site click here!

Thanks for your support and for helping to make this site a reality!


 Group: Christian Children Injured As Egypt Police Open Fire On Copts

Anonymous writes "CAIRO, EGYPT (Worthy News)-- Scores of Coptic Christian children are recovering from injuries and nearly two dozen minors remain detained after Egyptian security forces opened fire on unarmed Copts protesting against the authorities' decision to halt the construction of a church, rights investigators said Thursday, December 9.

Advocacy group International Christian Concern (ICC) quoted activist Mona Farous as saying that 38 children have been treated in hospital, and the group added that at least 20 others remain behind bars following the November 24 skirmishes in a poor suburb of the capital Cairo.

The children are among over 150 Copts arrested following the protests, in which four Copts were reportedly killed, including three young men and a four-year-old child who apparently suffocated from tear gas.

Egypt's official news agency MENA said earlier that the attorney general decided to hold 156 protesters for 15 days "on suspicion of inciting the riots." ICC said as many as 168 have meanwhile been detained.

MASSIVE FIGHTING

Fighting between security forces and up to 3,000 Copts broke out when Egyptian police cordoned off St. Mary’s Church in Giza, near Egypt's pyramids, according to witnesses and rights investigators.

"Security forces fired on the unarmed protesters with live ammunition and rubber bullets. Both Copts and security forces threw stones at each other," added ICC.

Giza Governor Sayyed Abdel-Aziz told reporters however that the Christians misused a permit for a social center to build a church.

Christians said they had the right do*****ents and would continue to build the three-floors domed structure despite alleged Muslim opposition.

MORE INCIDENTS

It was the latest in a series of incidents in Egypt where Coptic Christians frequently complain about unfair treatment and under-representation in the majority Muslim country.  Copt is a word derived from the Greek name Aigyptos, which means Egypt. Coptic Christians are believed to be among the largest and oldest Christian communities in the Middle East, comprising about 10 percent of Egypt's population of 80 million people.

However, "Anti-Christian persecution in Egypt is reaching a new level, as Copts are no longer merely discriminated against, but are in fact being targeted and murdered by the government," said ICC Regional Manager for the Middle East, Aidan Clay. "We urge President Hosni Mubarak to take immediate action by bringing those who authorized this attack to justice and by releasing those who have been arrested unjustly, especially the children," Clay told Worthy News and its news partner BosNewsLife.

On Saturday, December 4, rights activists, Christians and Muslims demonstrated in front of Egypt’s High Court to demand the release of the detained minors. They also demanded the resignation and prosecution of key officials, including Giza's governor and the chief of state security in Giza, who they accused of authorizing the use of live ammunition against the protesters. There was no immediate official response to these allegations.

Yet, "If action is not taken, it will be clear to all that Mubarak’s regime and Egyptian courts condone,  and even support, government induced violence upon Christians,” Clay added. The government has said however it wants to combat religious extremism in the country."

Posted by missionr on Wednesday, December 29 @ 15:18:10 EST (215 reads)
(Read More... | 4790 bytes more | 9 comments | Score: 0)


     Survey
Jesus and Mohammed- who should earn the title "Prince of Peace"?

Jesus the Christ
Mohammed
None of them
Both of Them
I don't even Care!



Results
Polls

Votes: 11
Comments: 0

     Login
Nickname

Password

Don't have an account yet? You can create one. As a registered user you have some advantages like theme manager, comments configuration and post comments with your name.

     Big Story of Today
There isn't a Biggest Story for Today, yet.

     Old Articles
There isn't content right now for this block.

     Information

Powered by PHP-Nuke

Valid HTML 4.01!

Valid CSS!





copyright Mission Rescue Evangelistic Network-a high-power mobile Apostolic machinery.
PHP-Nuke Copyright © 2005 by Francisco Burzi. This is free software, and you may redistribute it under the GPL. PHP-Nuke comes with absolutely no warranty, for details, see the license.
Page Generation: 0.57 Seconds