Monday, January 3, 2011

Coptic Massacre: Mr. President, stop funding Egypt (and all Muslim governments that allow murders of non-Muslims)

Coptic Massacre Sparks Protest against 

Massive US Aid to Egypt



by Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu
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Protesters in California demand end to U.S. aid to Egypt following the massacre outside a Coptic church in Alexandria, where a bomb blast killed 21 people and wounded more than 100 others during New Year’s prayers
Click here for video of prayers and bomb blast.


U.S. President Barack Obama called the attack “barbaric and heinous.”  
(Half-true ... Obama NEVER mentioned the fact that this is a Muslim jihad against Christians.  The Iraq Christians slaughtered inside a church by Muslims one month ago; the Christians murdered by Muslims in Pakistan; the Egyptian Muslims attacking Christians in Egypt; and the list grows daily of Islamic terrorism against both Christians and Jews.  Christinas are no more safe in Islamic countries than Jews ... and yet, Obama continues to praise this "Religion of no peace" and refuses to recognize the enemy of all religions and civilizations - ISLAM.)

Last year, Muslim terrorists gunned down nine Copts outside a church on the eve of the Coptic Christmas.  The Egyptian government called the slaughter an “isolated incident.” 
(Wrong again!  Egypt and other Muslim countries expect the world to continue to turn a blind eye at the destruction, murders, bombings, of Muslim governments towards non-Muslims.  The new Congress arriving in Washington needs to address this administration's foreign aid to countries throughout the Middle East that continue to attack non-Muslims.)

California Copts demonstrated in the rain in Los Angeles on Sunday to "show America what's happening in Egypt, 60-year-old Adib Ghobrani told the Beverly Hills Courier. International Christian Concern official Aiden Clay called on Americans to complain to Washington, which provides Cairo with more than $1 billion aid annually.

Egypt is the largest recipient of foreign aid after Israel, and has received more than $36 billion from the U.S. since it signed a peace treaty with Israel in 1979.

Protests following the attack were also held in Alexandria and Cairo, where Egyptian riot police faced off against protesters. Government spokesmen issued a call for national unity, but human rights leaders have charged Cairo with denying the extent of the 40-year tensions between Coptics and Muslims.

The suicide bombing represented a drastic escalation in Muslim violence against the Coptic minority, which comprises approximately 10 percent of Egypt’s population. Egypt blamed “foreign fingers,” possible Al-Qaeda, for the terrorist attack, Egypt's worst in recent memory, but The New York Times reported that Egyptian authorities said local citizens apparently were behind the bombing.

An international Christian organization charged two weeks ago that Egyptian police opened fire and shot live ammunition at unarmed Copts at a rally, where two people were killed.


Footage released of Egypt church blast