This article is from the source 'washpo' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle_east/egypt-sentences-4-coptic-teenagers-for-contempt-of-islam/2016/02/25/22518020-dbba-11e5-8210-f0bd8de915f6_story.html

The article has changed 4 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 0 Version 1
Egypt sentences 4 Coptic teenagers for contempt of Islam Egypt sentences 4 Coptic teenagers for contempt of Islam
(35 minutes later)
CAIRO — An Egyptian lawyer says a court in the country’s south has convicted four Coptic teenagers of contempt for Islam after they appeared in a video mocking Muslim prayers. CAIRO — An Egyptian court has convicted four Coptic Christian teenagers for contempt of Islam on Thursday, after they appeared in a video mocking Muslim prayers, sentencing three to five years in prison and referring a fourth, who is under 18, to a juvenile detention facility.
Three were sentenced to five years in prison each while the fourth was referred to a juvenile facility for being under the age of 18. His sentence was not announced. The harsh ruling which has followed a surge of blasphemy cases in Egyptian courts underscores a culture of intolerance within the country’s judicial system at a time when the Egyptian president is seeking to position himself as an advocate for religious reform.
Maher Naguib, who represents the teenagers, says they are high school students in the southern province of Minya. They haven’t been detained and didn’t appear in court for the trial. Their teenagers’ lawyer, Maher Naguib, said his clients, who are high school students in the southern province of Minya, haven’t been detained and didn’t appear in court for the trial.
Naguib says Thursday’s ruling is “unbelievable ... the maximum sentence” when they should only have been “punished with a fine.” He described the ruling as “unbelievable” and said the judge should have just punished the teenagers with a fine.
In the video, one student is seen kneeling on the ground and enacting the Muslim prayer while others stand behind him, laughing. The video was filmed by the students’ teacher, who is also a Christian, and who was sentenced to three years in prison for insulting Islam in a separate trial.
The 30-second video showed the students pretending to pray, with one kneeling on the floor while reciting Qur’anic verses and two others standing behind him and laughing. One waved his hand under a second’s neck in a sign of beheading.
Some ten security trucks surrounded the court building in the southern city of Bani Mazar. The families of the students cried, and some women wailed in disbelief and collapsed on hearing the verdict.
Naguib said the video came to light in April 2015, shortly after Islamic State militants in Libya beheaded dozens of Egyptian Christians. The video prompted calls by angry Muslims to evict the students and the teacher from their village. They were detained and the teacher and his family were ordered to leave the village after a meeting of the village elders.
Christians make up approximately 10 percent of Egypt’s population. They have long complained of discrimination by the Muslim majority. Christians were among the main supporters of the army chief-turned-president, Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, who led the military ouster of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi amid mass protests against Morsi’s rule.
Egypt has witnessed a spike in blasphemy charges in recent months. El-Sissi has vowed to purge extremism and modernize Egypt’s religious discourse.
Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.