EgyptInternational Religious Freedom Report 2005 Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
The Constitution provides for freedom of belief and the
practice of religious rites, although the Government places restrictions
on these rights in practice. Islam is the official state religion and
Shari'a (Islamic law) is the primary source of legislation; religious
practices that conflict with the Government's interpretation of Shari'a
are prohibited. Members of the non-Muslim religious minorities officially
recognized by the Government generally worship without harassment and may
maintain links with coreligionists in other countries; however, members of
religions that are not recognized by the Government, particularly the
Baha'i Faith, experience personal and collective hardship. In some areas, there were improvements in the Government's
respect for religious freedom; however, there continued to be abuses and
restrictions during the period covered by this report. The National
Council for Human Rights (NCHR), established in January 2004 and entrusted
with protecting and improving the status of human rights, including
religious freedom, issued its first report in March 2005. Although the
Council did not give significant attention to issues of religious freedom,
it submitted numerous requests to the Ministry of Interior requesting
action on complaints it had received regarding church repair and
construction. Mohamed El-Derini, one of a group of nine Shi'a Muslims
arrested by the State Security Intelligence Service (SSIS) in 2003 and
March 2004, apparently because of their religious beliefs, was released in
June 2005 after having spent 15 months in administrative detention. Derini
was freed following four separate rulings by the Supreme State Security
Emergency Court ordering his release and an advisory opinion issued by the
U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention. There are credible reports that
SSIS repeatedly tortured and mistreated Derini and the other detainees
while in custody. Metwalli Ibrahim Metwalli Saleh, arrested by SSIS in May
2003 apparently because of his progressive views on Islam, remained in
detention despite five separate rulings from the Supreme State Security
Emergency Court and an official statement from the state security
prosecutor ordering his release. Saleh, age 51, is being held in Al-Wadi
al-Gadid Prison, near Assiut. Despite decrees issued by President Mubarak in 1998 and 1999
to facilitate approvals for repairing, renovating, expanding, and building
churches, some local security and governmental officials continued to
hinder efforts by Christians to obtain the permits required for such
construction, an attitude encouraged by the 1856 Hamayouni decree and the
1934 El-Ezabi decree. Tradition and some aspects of the law discriminated against
religious minorities, including Christians and particularly Baha'is. The
Government also continued to deny civil documents, including identity
cards, birth certificates and marriage licenses, to members of the small
Baha'i community. In the past, the Government did not provide a legal
means for converts from Islam to Christianity to amend their civil records
to reflect their new religious status. Approximately eight Muslims who had
converted from Christianity were issued verdicts allowing recovery of
their original Christian identities. However, this has not yet been tested
in courts in the case of citizens originally Muslim who converted to
Christianity. The Government also continued to prosecute a small number of
citizens for unorthodox religious beliefs and practices alleged to "insult
heavenly religions." There continued to be religious discrimination and sectarian
tension in society during the period covered by this report. In early
December 2004, a three-way standoff at Cairo's Abbasiya Cathedral
involving security forces, orthodox church officials, and several thousand
Christian protestors ended with the return of Wafaa' Constantin, the wife
of a Coptic Orthodox priest in the Nile Delta province of Beheira, to the
protective custody of the church following her apparent elopement with a
Muslim man and conversion to Islam in late November 2004. Although dozens
of protestors and police were injured during the standoff, police did not
respond with decisive force and made a notable effort to cooperate with
Church authorities. However, a citizen filed a lawsuit against the
Ministry of Interior (MOI)—responsible for handing Constantin back to the
church—demanding Constantin's whereabouts. The exact course of events that
led to the Constantin controversy, including her subsequent return to
Christianity, remained unclear at the end of the reporting period.
The U.S. Government discusses religious freedom issues with
the Government as part of its overall policy to promote human rights. The
Ambassador, senior administration officials, and members of Congress
continued to raise U.S. concerns about religious discrimination with
senior government officials. Section I. Religious Demography The country has an area of 370,308 square miles, and its
population is approximately 72 million, of whom almost 90 percent are
estimated to be Sunni Muslims. Shi'a Muslims constitute less than 1
percent of the population. Estimates of the percentage of Christians in
the population range from the Government’s unofficial estimate of 8
percent (approximately 5.6 million) to Christian estimates of 12 to 15
percent (approximately 8.6 to 10.8 million), the majority of whom belong
to the Coptic Orthodox Church. Other Christian communities include the
Armenian Apostolic, Catholic (Armenian, Chaldean, Greek, Melkite, Roman,
and Syrian Catholic), Maronite, and Orthodox (Greek and Syrian) churches.
An evangelical Protestant church, established in the middle of the 19th
century, now includes 16 Protestant denominations. There also are
followers of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, which was granted legal
status in the 1960s. There are small numbers of Mormons and members of
Jehovah's Witnesses, but the Government does not recognize either group.
The non-Muslim, non-Coptic Orthodox communities range in size from several
thousand to hundreds of thousands. The number of Baha'is is estimated at
approximately 2,000. The Jewish community numbers fewer than 200 persons.
Christians are dispersed throughout the country, although
the percentage of Christians tends to be higher in Upper Egypt (the
southern part of the country) and some sections of Cairo and Alexandria.
There are many foreign religious groups, especially Roman
Catholics and Protestants, who have had a presence in the country for
almost a century. These groups engage predominately in education, social,
and development work. The Government generally tolerates these groups if
they do not proselytize. However, the Government has acted on a number of
occasions over the past several years to refuse reentry into the country
of individuals suspected of proselytizing. Section II. Status of Religious Freedom
Legal/Policy Framework The Constitution, under Article 46, provides for freedom of
belief and the practice of religious rites; however, the Government places
restrictions on these rights in practice. Islam is the official state
religion, and Shari'a is the primary source of legislation; religious
practices that conflict with the Government's interpretation of Shari'a
are prohibited. Members of the non-Muslim religious minorities generally
worship without legal harassment and may maintain links with
coreligionists in other countries. Members of other religions that are not
recognized by the Government, particularly the Baha'i Faith, continue to
experience personal and collective hardship. For a religious group to be officially recognized it must
submit a request to the Religious Affairs Department at the Ministry of
Interior, which determines whether it would pose a threat or upset
national unity or social peace. The Religious Affairs Department also
consults the leading religious figures in the country, particularly the
Pope of the Coptic Orthodox Church and the Sheikh of Al-Azhar. The
registration is then referred to the President, who issues a decree
recognizing the new group, according to Law 15 of 1927. If a religious
group chooses to bypass the official registration process, participants
are subject to detention and could also face prosecution and punishment
under Article 98(F) of the Penal Code, which forbids the "ridiculing of a
heavenly religion." The Government last recognized a new religious
group--First Bible Baptist Folk--in 1990. Article 19 of the Constitution requires elementary and
secondary public schools to offer religious instruction. Public and
private schools provide religious instruction according to the faith of
the student. While there is no legal requirement for a Christian girl or
woman to convert to Islam to marry a Muslim man, conversion to Islam has
been used to circumvent the legal prohibition on marriage under the age of
16 or marriage between the ages of 16 and 21 without the approval and
presence of the girl's guardian. Egyptian law recognizes the willing
conversion to Islam of any person over age 16. The Government continued to encourage interfaith dialogue.
The religious establishment of Al-Azhar and the Ministry of Awqaf (Islamic
Religious Endowments) engaged in interfaith discussions, both domestically
and abroad. Domestically, a Muslim-Christian conference in March,
organized by the International Islamic Forum and the Middle East Council
of Churches, included dialogue on cooperation, mutual respect, family
values, and peaceful coexistence. The Grand Imam of Al-Azhar Sheikh
Tantawi and Coptic Orthodox Pope Shenouda presided over opening
ceremonies. Government literacy programs promoted reading materials that
encourage mutual tolerance. In January 2004, the Government formed the
National Council for Human Rights (NCHR), which was entrusted with
protecting, supporting, developing, upholding, and improving the status of
human rights, including religious freedom. The Government appointed a
Coptic Christian as president and named prominent Copts to 5 of the
Council's 25 seats. The Council released its first report in March.
Although the Council did not give significant attention in its report to
issues of religious freedom, it submitted a total of 27 requests to the
Ministry of Interior and several governorates in Upper Egypt requesting
action on numerous complaints it had received concerning alleged
violations of religious freedom. Twenty-three of the requests the Council
submitted dealt with church repair and construction; however, according to
the Council's report, the Ministry of Interior had not responded to any of
the requests. The following religious holy days are designated national
holidays: Eid Al-Fitr, Eid Al-Adha, the Islamic new year, the birth of the
Prophet Muhammed, and Coptic Christmas (January 7). Restrictions on Religious Freedom All mosques must be licensed, and the Government attempts to
control them legally for the stated purpose of combating extremists. The
Government appoints and pays the salaries of the imams who lead prayers in
mosques, and it monitors their sermons; however, it does not contribute to
the funding of Christian churches. During the reporting period, the
Minister of Awqaf announced that of the more than 92,500 mosques in the
country, the Government controls administratively 74,500 regular mosques
and 18,000 mosques located in private buildings. The Government annexes
new mosques every year, but the process does not keep pace with new mosque
construction; however, a February 2004 decree from the Minister of Awqaf
deprived governors of unilaterally issuing permits to build mosques and
placed mosques in private homes under Awqaf administrative control.
The contemporary interpretation of the 1856 Ottoman
Hamayouni decree, partially still in force, requires non-Muslims to obtain
a presidential decree to enlarge or build places of worship. In addition,
Interior Ministry regulations, issued in 1934 under the Al-Ezabi decree,
specify a set of 10 conditions that the Government must consider prior to
issuance of a presidential decree permitting construction of a church. The
conditions include the requirement that the distance between a church and
a mosque not be less than 100 meters and that the approval of the
neighboring Muslim community be obtained. In 1999, President Mubarak issued Decree 453, making the
repair of all places of worship subject to a 1976 civil construction code.
This decree places repair of churches and mosques on equal footing under
the law. However, permits for such repairs are still subject to approval
by local administrative and security officials. Even though mosque and
church repairs are now subject to the same laws, authorities enforce the
laws more strictly for churches than for mosques. Security officials also
sometimes deny or delay permits for the supply of water and electricity.
Incidents of blocked or delayed permits vary, often depending on the
attitude of local security officials and the governorate leadership toward
the church, and on their personal relationships with representatives of
the Christian churches. According to statistics published by the Government's
Official Gazette, 12 Presidential decrees were issued from July 1, 2004,
through June 30, 2005, for church-related construction, compared with
seven permits reported during the previous period. 6 of these 12 permits
were for evangelical Christian churches, 5 for Coptic churches, and 1 for
a Catholic church. Government officials have previously asserted that the
Government approves a much larger number of projects for church
construction and expansion, through informal arrangements between church
authorities and local security and administrative officials. Overall, the
approval process for church construction continued to be hindered by time
delays often measured in years, and the Government continued to be
insufficiently responsive to the requests of Christians. In his April 26 broadcast on national television, President
Mubarak, answering a question about whether the same standards for issuing
permits to construct places of worship are applied to both Copts and
Muslims, stated that the problem of issuing permits to build churches had
been addressed by the Government and that all Egyptians are treated
equally in this regard. However, in practice, local administrative and/or
security officials severely restrict this right. Although President
Mubarak reportedly has approved all requests for permits presented to him,
some Christians maintain that the Interior Ministry delays--in some
instances indefinitely--submission of their requests to the President.
They also maintain that security forces have blocked them from using
permits that have been issued and at times denied them permits for repairs
to church buildings and the supply of water and electricity to existing
church facilities. Christian observers believe that government officials,
particularly at the local security level, zealously enforce regulations
pertaining to church projects while exercising lax oversight of the repair
and construction of mosques. In March 2004, the country's Supreme Constitutional Court
dismissed a case that an individual brought against the Coptic Orthodox
Church. The Court ruled that the Constitution required Christian and
Muslim endowments be treated under an equal standard and that Christian
endowments, like Muslim endowments, could not be sued. Christian advocates
hoped the judgment would set a precedent for "equal treatment" between
Islamic and Christian facilities, with implications for legal cases
relative to construction and repair of churches. Despite this ruling, numerous complaints of delayed church
construction and repair projects continued to be reported during the
period covered by this report. Elements within the Government, often local
administrative and/or security officials, continued to impede several
stages of church repair and construction projects by refusing to issue
permits for new churches, preventing the implementation of
pre-construction permits for new churches, failing to enforce restoration
and renovation decrees, and closing unlicensed church buildings. Targeting the first stage of church repair and construction,
local government officials continued to prevent new churches from being
built, often requiring an exhaustive list of documents to be submitted
multiple times between administrative and security departments of
governorates, in repeated attempts to preclude final authorization,
despite Presidential and MOI approvals for a building permit to be issued.
As a result, congregations have experienced lengthy delays – lasting for
years in many cases – while waiting for new church building permits to be
issued. The Assiut bishopric has been waiting for local officials to
issue a building permit for a new church in the governorate's Arbaeen
District, despite a 1997 order from the President and approval from the
Ministry of Interior to issue the decree. Similar fate has befallen
residents in Assiut's El Hamra District in their attempt to build a new
church since 1997, and Christian residents of the industrial town of Burg
al Arab, Alexandria Governorate, to build an orthodox church since 1988.
The Brothers denomination, also in Assiut Governorate, received a permit
to build a church in 2001, but local police stopped construction of the
building's foundation. After a wait of 18 years, St. George Church in Dafesh, a
majority Christian community near Assiut, Upper Egypt, obtained approval
from the local governor in 2000 to build a new church to replace the
original building, which had grown too small to accommodate the growing
community. Shortly after construction began in 2000, the new site was
vandalized, allegedly by local Muslim residents. The Government halted
construction, ostensibly because the church had only obtained local
approval and not a presidential decree, required to either build a new
church or expand an existing church. Construction remained halted at the
end of the period covered by this report. The congregation continued to
worship at the older site. Authorities have also refused to issue decrees for
restoration, renovation, and expansion of churches, or have failed to
enforce decrees that have already been approved. In 1999, the governor of Assiut issued a decree to St. John
the Baptist at Awlad Elias in Sadfa, near Assiut, stating that the
Orthodox church was given license to effect several remodeling projects
and restoration projects. In 2001, however, Sadfa police halted repairs,
because authorities believed that the church would enlarge its size by
extending the building into the churchyard. After negotiations with State
Security, the church received permission to demolish a wall to extend its
size. However, after the newspaper Watani published an article exposing
this issue and the outcome, State Security officials halted construction a
second time. As of the end of June, construction had not resumed, and the
church was still waiting for the MOI to permit resumption of repairs. The
congregation was forced to build a tent in the small church courtyard to
conduct prayers. In August 2001, Assiut's governor approved the restoration
of Mar Guirguis Church in Sahel Selim. In November 2001, the permit was
issued. Local authorities, however, required that the church obtain
approval from the Supreme Council of Antiquities to prove that the
building was not registered as a historic monument. When the church duly
obtained the required approval in October 2003, however, security
authorities then summoned the priest to sign a pledge agreeing not to
renovate the church or construct new buildings. Additionally, an official
technical committee inspected the church and determined in March 2004 that
the building was not structurally sound enough to undergo renovation.
However, on June 20, 2005, the church was granted a presidential decree
allowing it to construct a new building. In Ezbet al-Nakhl, East Cairo, Coptic leaders of the Church
of the Archangel Mikhail received permission from the Ministry of Interior
in 1996, ratified by the Governor of Cairo in 2001, to expand the church
to accommodate its growing congregation. However, local authorities in the
district of al-Marg refused to accept the request to expand the church
without a presidential decree, which was required for the renovation. The
church, which had originally sought a presidential decree in 1987, had not
been able to obtain one, and the project remained frozen at the end of the
period covered by this report. Government officials asserted that the
project was frozen because church officials did not employ the proper
procedures while seeking a presidential decree, therefore making it
illegal to renovate the church. Local authorities have employed a number of tactics to close
down unlicensed buildings used as places of worship. The Apostolic Church
in Abowan, Minya Governorate, is an unlicensed church that has been used
as a place for worship since 1984. On April 5, 2005, the local building
authority sent a structural inspection team to evaluate the building,
despite having not been requested by church authorities to do so. On May
9, State Security then summoned the pastor, ordered that he remove the
sign bearing the name of the church, and informed him that the building
would be demolished in 15 days per the inspection team's report that it
was structurally unsound. At the unlicensed Evangelical Church in Maadi, police
reportedly halted a reconstruction project in November 2004 and prevented
church members from entering the church. For 50 years, the church has been
unable to obtain a licensing permit. In 2002, the Government ordered the closure of a building in
Tenth of Ramadan City, east of Cairo, used as a training and conference
center by the Protestant Qasr al-Doubbara Church of Central Cairo. The
church successfully fought the closure, obtaining a government decree in
November 2003 that ordered the reopening of the facility. However, the
municipality appealed the decision and continued to block use of the
building on the grounds that the building, which is zoned as a residence,
did not have a permit for it to operate as a public building. In April,
2005, a court ruled in favor of the church, ordering the building to be
reopened. The building is again being used as a training and conference
center. As a result of restrictions, some communities use private
buildings and apartments for religious services or build without permits.
On April 10, an unlicensed church hall in Baghour village,
Menoufiya Governorate, was burned down by unknown arsonists. Nine Coptic
Christians received minor injuries. The local governor supported
rebuilding the facility. It was unclear whether there was an investigation
into the arson. The Government continued to try citizens for unorthodox
religious beliefs. On March 31, the Maadi misdemeanor court issued a
verdict in a blasphemy case involving Ibrahim Ahmad Abu Shusha and 11 of
his followers, who had been detained absent an arrest warrant since early
July 2004. The court sentenced Abu Shusha to 3 years' imprisonment, for
claiming to be divine and for ridiculing a heavenly religion, namely
Islam. The court sentenced the 11 other defendants (including 3 women, 2
of whom are Abu Shusha's wives) to 1 year imprisonment and ordered the
confiscation of the leaflets and writings that propagated the group's
ideology. In its reasoning, the court stated that there was sufficient
evidence that Abu Shusha embraced beliefs that are contrary to and
derogatory of Islam, and that he tried to propagate those beliefs by
attempting to show that he possessed divine powers. The court also
asserted that freedom of belief does not comprise permission to deny the
principles of heavenly religions. The law states that Political parties based on religion are
illegal. Pursuant to this law, the Muslim Brotherhood (MB) is an illegal
organization. Muslim Brothers speak openly and publicly about their views
and have recently been identifying themselves publicly as members of the
organization, although they remain subject to arbitrary treatment and
pressure from the Government. During the period covered by this report,
hundreds of members of the Muslim Brotherhood were arrested and charged
with membership in an illegal organization, planning to revive the
activities of the banned group, possessing anti-government leaflets,
obstructing the constitution and the law of the country, and organizing
demonstrations without obtaining prior security permission. Authorities
prevented several other members from traveling abroad. In April, MB leader
Essam El Erian twice was prevented from traveling to Damascus and Algeria,
while Muhammad Gamal Heshmat was prevented from going to Algeria. On the
other hand, authorities allowed Supreme Guide Mahdi Akef to go to Saudi
Arabia for pilgrimage, although his name is on the list of persons
prohibited from traveling abroad. On June 19, 2005, the Public Prosecutor
ordered the release of 463 recently arrested MB members and announced that
only 37 MB members remained in detention. On June 20, however, MB Supreme
Guide Mahdy Akef asserted that 309 MB members remained in detention.
Authorities arrested Erian on May 6, 2005, and at the end of the reporting
period, he remained in detention; he was reportedly planning to run for
President. Seventeen independent candidates backed by the Muslim
Brotherhood were elected to the People's Assembly in the 2000
parliamentary elections, despite government-sponsored efforts to stop
them, which mainly included limiting access to polling stations but also
sometimes included government-sponsored violence, detentions, and arrests.
Two of the 17 lost their seats in 2004 for reported electoral
irregularities, while another member was able to win a seat in the 2004
Shura Council elections. In June 2004, MB member Akram Zuhairy died while
in police custody. The MB claimed torture and medical negligence were the
cause of death; a prosecution investigation concluded he died when he fell
while being transferred to prison and hit his head. On May 6, 2005, MB
member Tareq El Ghannam died while taking part in an anti-government
demonstration in Daqhaliyya Governorate. The MB claimed security forces
caused Ghannam's death by beating him and using tear gas; Ghannam's
brother claimed he died because MB members refused to allow the ambulance
to reach him. In contrast to previous years, there were no reports of
authors facing trial or charges related to writings or statements
considered heretical during the reporting period. In 2003, the Ministry of Justice issued a decree authorizing
Al-Azhar sheikhs to confiscate publications, tapes, speeches, and artistic
materials deemed inconsistent with Islamic law. In 2003, the IRC recommended banning the book "Discourse and
Interpretations" by Nasr Abou Zeid. IRC member Dr. Mohammed Emara was
quoted as claiming the book contradicted Islamic tenets. The Government
did not act on the recommendation by the end of the reporting period.
In May 2004, the IRC formally recommended banning four
books: Nawal El Sadawi's "The Fall of the Imam;" Iskander Shaheen's
"Freemasonry: Religion or Fraud;" Ali Youssef's "The Call of
Consciousness;" and Hisham El Bahrani's "City of Miracles." Sadawi's book
was first published 20 years ago and has been translated into 14
languages. Although the IRC's recommended bans led to widespread criticism
from writers and human rights activists, the Ministry of Justice decided
in June 2004 to authorize al-Azhar's "inspectors" to seize publications,
tapes, speeches, and artistic material that deviated from the IRC's
interpretation of Shari'a. Prior to June 1, the IRC could not confiscate
books it disapproved of without first seeking a court order. In August 2004, the IRC banned "The Responsibility for the
Failure of the Islamic State," by Gamal El Banna, a liberal Islamist
thinker. The IRC ruled that Gamal El Banna's book deviated from Islamic
orthodoxy, and the IRC began efforts to confiscate the book from the
marketplace. In October 2004, the Egyptian Organization for Human Rights
issued a report which criticized IRC's book confiscations, terming them "a
hammer blow to freedom of thought." In September 2004, the Alexandria Administrative Court heard
a lawsuit filed by lawyer Nabih al-Wahsh demanding the confiscation of a
book, "The Hijab: A Modernist Approach," by Ikbal Baraka. The suit also
sought the dismissal of Baraka as chief editor of Hawwa Magazine and her
dismissal from the Press Syndicate. The suit alleged that Baraka's book
denied the religious sanction for the veiling of women. The suit also
charged the ministers of culture, aviation, education, and information, as
well as the Grand Imam of al-Azhar University, with failure to block
Baraka's book. A wide cross-section of writers and intellectuals,
including Islamist writers, have criticized the effort to ban Baraka's
book. The local media, including state television and newspapers
with some governmental oversight, gives prominence to Islamic programming,
which implies the primacy of Islam among "the heavenly religions." The
weekly religion page of the prominent daily al-Ahram, a privately funded
newspaper with some governmental oversight, often reports on conversions
to Islam and states that converts improved their lives and found peace and
moral stability, things the converts said they lacked in their previous
faith. While Christian television programs are aired on state-owned Nile
TV, they are not presented on a regular basis. Pope Shenouda has banned Coptic travel to Jerusalem since
the Egypt-Israel Peace Treaty of 1979. However, press reports indicated
that an estimated 735 Egyptian Copts visited Israel in 2004 for
pilgrimage, citing Israeli Interior Ministry statistics. Law 263 of 1960, still in force, bans Baha'i institutions
and community activities, and a 1961 Presidential decree stripped Baha'is
of legal recognition. During the Nasser era, the Government confiscated
all Baha'i community properties, including Baha'i centers, libraries, and
cemeteries. The problems of Baha'is, who number fewer than 2,000 persons
in the country, were compounded when the MOI began to upgrade its
automation of civil records, including national identity cards. The
Government has asserted that its new software requires all citizens to be
categorized as Muslims, Christians, or Jews. Baha'is and other religious
groups who do not fit into any of these categories have been compelled
either to misrepresent themselves as members of one of these three
religions or to go without valid identity documents. Most Baha'is have
chosen the latter course. The Government's unwillingness to issue Baha'is
identity cards and other necessary documents made it increasingly
difficult for Baha'is to register their children in school, to open bank
accounts, and to register businesses. Baha'is at age 16 face additional
problems under Law 143/1994, which makes it mandatory for all citizens to
obtain a new identification card featuring a new National Identification
number. Police, often on public buses, conduct random inspections of
identity papers, and those found without their identity card are regularly
detained until the document is provided to the police. Some Baha'is,
unable to receive identity cards, frequently stay home to avoid police
scrutiny and possible arrest. In May 2004, the Government confiscated the identity cards
of two Baha'is who were applying for passports. Officials told them that
they were acting on instructions from the MOI to confiscate any identity
cards belonging to Baha'is. During the reporting period, some Baha'is reported that
government representatives offered to issue them passports, but no other
documents. The Baha'i leadership noted that while this would enable them
to leave the country, it would not facilitate their continued residence in
the country. Despite the Government's claim that it is unable to issue
identity documents without Jewish, Christian, or Muslim designation, there
is evidence that, on rare occasion, the Ministry of Interior has issued
documents that list a citizen's religion as "other" or "—-" or simply do
not include mention of religion. In 1997, a human rights activist filed a lawsuit seeking the
removal of the religious affiliation category from government
identification cards. The plaintiff challenged the constitutionality of a
1994 decree by the MOI governing the issuance of new identification cards.
A hearing scheduled for February 25, 2005, never took place. The court
informed the attorney for the plaintiff that the case documents had been
withdrawn and forwarded to the president of the State's Council, a highly
unusual procedure. A new hearing date was set for October 14. During a nationally televised interview on April 26,
President Mubarak stated that as far as he was concerned "Muslim, Copt and
Jew are one and the same—they are all citizens of this country with no
difference between them." However, he made no reference to citizens having
other beliefs, such as Baha'is or agnostics. Legal ambiguity also concerns the membership of the Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS), or Mormons, in Cairo. The LDS
Church has maintained an organized congregation in Egypt for over 30
years, though without formal legal recognition. The Government is aware of
the activities of the congregation and has raised no objection so long as
no proselytizing of citizens occurs; however, excessive attention from
State Security has been a problem for individual citizen members who
attempted to participate in meetings, particularly those who have
converted to the LDS Church overseas and then returned to Egypt. According
to credible sources in the LDS community, citizen members sometimes avoid
meetings out of fear of harassment from State Security. The Constitution provides for equal public rights and duties
without discrimination based on religion or creed, and in general the
Government upholds these constitutional protections; however, government
discrimination against non-Muslims exists. There are no Christians serving
as governors or as presidents or deans of public universities, and they
are rarely nominated by the Government to run in elections as National
Democratic Party (NDP) candidates. As of June 30, there were 7 Christians
(4 appointed; 3 elected) in the 454-seat People's Assembly, 6 Christians
(all appointed) in the 264-seat Shura Council, and 2 Christians in the
32-member Cabinet. Christians, who represent approximately 10 percent of
the population, held less than 2 percent of the seats in the People's
Assembly and Shura Council. There are few Christians in the upper ranks of the security
services and armed forces. Government discriminatory practices continued
to include discrimination against Christians in the public sector,
discrimination against Christians in staff appointments to public
universities, payment of Muslim imams through public funds (Christian
clergy are paid by private church funds), and refusal to admit Christians
to Al-Azhar University (a publicly-funded institution). In general, public
university training programs for Arabic language teachers refuse to admit
non-Muslims because the curriculum involves the study of the Qur'an. There
have been no reports of Christian graduates since 2001. Anti-Semitic sentiments appeared in both the pro-government
and opposition press. Anti-Semitic articles and opinion pieces appeared in
the print media, and editorial cartoons appeared in the press and
electronic media. For example, on June 24 and July 1, 2004, the National
Democratic Party (NDP) newspaper al-Lewa al-Islami published articles by
Professor Refaat Sayed Ahmed in which he denied the Holocaust. On August
25, 2004, the NDP announced that it had banned Professor Ahmed from future
publishing, that the editor who approved his article had been fired, and
that the NDP and the Government rejected anti-Semitism and acknowledged
the reality of the Holocaust. The Government reportedly has advised journalists and
cartoonists to avoid anti-Semitism. Government officials insist that
anti-Semitic statements in the media are a reaction to Israeli government
actions against Palestinians and do not reflect historical anti-Semitism;
however, there are relatively few public attempts to distinguish between
anti-Semitism and anti-Israeli sentiment. In January 2004, the Supreme Administrative Court upheld a
lower court's 2001 decision to ban an annual festival (for Jewish
pilgrims) at the tomb of Rabbi Abu Hasira in a village in the Nile Delta
and rejected the Ministry of Culture's designation of the site as a
protected antiquity. The 2001 decision linked the status of the site and
the festival to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and the celebration has
not been held in the past 3 years. There were reports in January 2005 that
Jewish pilgrims again celebrated the Abu Hasira festival. The application of family law, including marriage, divorce,
alimony, child custody, and burial, is based on an individual's religion.
In the practice of family law, the Government recognizes only the three
"heavenly religions": Islam, Christianity, and Judaism. Muslim families
are subject to Shari'a, Christian families are subject to Canon law, and
Jewish families are subject to Jewish law. In cases of family law disputes
involving a marriage between a Christian woman and a Muslim man, the
courts apply the Shari'a. The Government does not recognize the marriages
of citizens adhering to faiths other than Christianity, Judaism, or Islam.
Under Shari'a, as practiced in the country, non-Muslim males
must convert to Islam to marry Muslim women, but non-Muslim women need not
convert to marry Muslim men. Muslim women are prohibited from marrying
Christian men. Inheritance laws for all citizens are based on the
Government's interpretation of Shari'a. Muslim female heirs receive half
the amount of a male heir's inheritance, while Christian widows of Muslims
have no inheritance rights. A sole female heir receives half her parents'
estate; the balance goes to designated male relatives. A sole male heir
inherits all his parents' property. Male Muslim heirs face strong social
pressure to provide for all family members who require assistance;
however, this assistance is not always provided. Under Shari'a, converts from Islam lose all rights of
inheritance; however, because the Government offers no legal means for
converts from Islam to Christianity to amend their civil records to
reflect their new religious status, inheritance rights may appear not to
have been lost. The law provides for khul' divorce, which allows a Muslim
woman to obtain a divorce without her husband's consent, provided that she
is willing to forego all of her financial rights, including alimony,
dowry, and other benefits. In practice, some judges have not applied the
law accurately or fairly, causing lengthy bureaucratic delays for the
thousands of women who have filed for khul' divorce. Many women who have
complained that after being granted khul', the required child alimony is
not paid. The Coptic Orthodox Church excommunicates women members who
marry Muslim men and requires that other Christians convert to Coptic
Orthodoxy to marry a member of the Church. Coptic males are prevented from
marrying Muslim women by both civil and religious laws. A civil marriage
abroad is an option should a Christian male and an Egyptian Muslim female
decide to marry; however, if the couple returned to Egypt, their marriage
would not be legally recognized. Additionally, the woman could be arrested
and charged with apostasy, and any children from such a marriage could be
taken and assigned to the physical custody of a male Muslim guardian, as
determined by the Government’s interpretation of Shari'a. The Coptic
Orthodox Church permits divorce only in specific circumstances, such as
adultery or conversion of one spouse to another religion. Abuses of Religious Freedom In June 2004, the Court of Cassation, the country's highest
appellate court, upheld the acquittal of 94 of 96 suspects who were
charged with various offenses committed during the early 2000 sectarian
violence in the town of al-Kush, which left 21 Christians dead. The
Court's decision left public prosecutors and human rights activists with
no further legal options. In an earlier incident, Shayboub William Arsal, a Coptic
Christian, was convicted and sentenced for the 1998 murders of two Copts
in al-Kush. His appeal, which has been pending for 5 years, had not been
heard. The local Christian community believed that Shayboub was accused
and convicted of the crime because of his religion. Al-Azhar's Islamic Research Center issued a fatwa, or legal
opinion, in December 2003 condemning Baha'is as apostates. The Government at times prosecutes members of religious
groups whose practices are deemed to deviate from mainstream Islamic
beliefs, and whose activities are alleged to jeopardize communal harmony.
Shiite Muslim Mohamed Ramadan Hussein El-Derini, arrested in March 2004
apparently because of his religious beliefs, was released in June, 2005,
after having spent 15 months in administrative detention without charge or
trial. Derini was freed following four separate rulings by the Supreme
State Security Emergency Court ordering his release and an advisory
opinion issued by the U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention. Following
each ruling by the court, the Minister of Interior issued a new
administrative detention decree, nullifying the court's release order.
There were credible reports that members of the State Security
Intelligence Service (SSIS) repeatedly tortured and mistreated Derini in
custody. Derini's arrest came in the wake of the arrests of at least eight
other Shi'a Muslims in 2003 in the town of Ras Gharib, again apparently
due to their affiliation with Shi'a Islam, which is not officially
recognized by the Government but acknowledged as a branch of Islam by
Al-Azhar. Five were released within several weeks, but three, Adel
el-Shazli, Ahmed Gom'a, and Mohammed Hama Omar, were sent to prison in
Cairo and Wadi Natroun for interrogation. As in Derini's case, there were
credible reports that security forces tortured and mistreated these three
individuals while in detention. Goma'a was released on April 29, 2004;
El-Shazli in June 2004; and Mohammed Omar in August 2004. In May 2003, SSIS arrested Metwalli Ibrahim Metwalli Saleh,
apparently because of his progressive views on Islam. Metwalli's
unpublished research, which he distributed to religious scholars and
several embassies prior to his arrest, refuted the idea that it is a
Muslim's religious duty to kill an "apostate" and also argued that Islam
permits a Muslim woman to marry a non-Muslim man. SSIS detained Saleh, a
graduate of Al-Azhar University, without charge for nearly 2 months until
July 2003 when he was charged by the State Security Prosecutor with
"contempt of Islam." Following an investigation, the State Security
Prosecutor then ordered Saleh released in late October 2003; however, the
MOI continued to detain him under an administrative detention decree (the
Emergency Law). After each of five separate rulings from the Supreme State
Security Emergency Court ordering his release—the most recent of which
occurred on June 30, 2005—the MOI renewed the detention order under the
Emergency Law. Saleh remained in detention in Al-Wadi al-Gadid Prison,
near Assiut. There were credible reports that state security officers
harassed and threatened Saleh's wife and son. In March 2004, a State Security Emergency Court found 26
persons, including 3 Britons, guilty of membership in an illegal
subversive organization (the Islamic Liberation Party) and of obstructing
the law and the Constitution. The defendants received sentences of 1 to 5
years. There were credible reports that defendants were tortured during
the Government's investigation of the case. Neither the Constitution nor the Civil and Penal Codes
prohibit proselytizing, but police have harassed those accused of
proselytizing on charges of ridiculing or insulting heavenly religions or
inciting sectarian strife. In April 2004, a woman who had converted from Coptic
Christianity to Islam upon her marriage to a Muslim approached Andraus
Mokhtar Maiz, a Coptic policeman in al-Minya, and told him that she wanted
to convert back to Christianity. Maiz reportedly referred her to a bishop,
only to learn soon thereafter that the woman had filed a case against him,
accusing him of misusing his authority as a policeman and of bribing a
Muslim to convert. SSIS then arrested Maiz in al-Minya, where he was
reportedly held incommunicado for a week and beaten. Released after SSIS
determined that there was no wrongdoing, Maiz was re-arrested in late June
2004, after the woman appealed to security officials. In July 2004, Maiz
was charged with dereliction of duty and with bribing a Muslim to convert
to Christianity. A military court sentenced him to a prison term of 1 year
in the military prison in Minya Governorate, but Maiz was released in
January and reinstated to his job. While there are no legal restrictions on the conversion of
non-Muslims to Islam, there were occasional reports that police harassed
Christians who converted from Islam. The law prescribes administrative steps consequential to the
conversion of a non-Muslim to Islam. The minor children of converts to
Islam, and in some cases adult children, may automatically become
classified as Muslims in the eyes of the Government irrespective of the
religion of the other spouse. This practice is in accordance with the
Government's interpretation of Shari'a, which dictates "no jurisdiction of
a non-Muslim over a Muslim." In April 2004, an administrative court issued a verdict
allowing Mona Makram Gibran, who had converted to Islam and later
converted back to Christianity, to recover her original (Christian) name
and identity. Some legal observers believed the case would constitute a
significant precedent as the Government has generally refused to
acknowledge citizens' conversions from Islam to Christianity. The court's
written verdict noted "... the Constitution guarantees equality among
citizens ... without any discrimination based on race, sex, language, or
faith. The Government also guarantees freedom of thought and religious
faith in accordance with Article 46 of the Constitution. ... [The State]
is legally committed to register the woman's real religion and is not
allowed under any circumstance to use its assigned powers to force the
woman to remain Muslim." As of late June 2005, there were 49 other cases
involving individuals who converted to Islam and then back to
Christianity, who were attempting to recover their original Christian
identities. All of these cases were before the same judge of the Cairo
Administrative Court who ruled in the Gibran case. Of these 49
individuals, approximately 8 had received verdicts allowing them to
recover their Christian identities. The MOI appealed two of these cases,
perhaps because it did not foresee the flood of cases filed after the
Gibran decision. These two cases were before the Supreme Administrative
Court at the end of the reporting period. It remained unclear whether
these cases would set a broad precedent for the Government's treatment of
converts from Islam. Prior to the above mentioned cases, the Government had not
recognized conversions of individuals originally Muslim to Christianity or
other religions, and resistance to such conversions by local officials
constituted a prohibition in practice. In the absence of a legal means to
register their change in religious status, some converts resorted to
soliciting illicit identity papers, often by submitting fraudulent
supporting documents or bribing the government clerks who process the
documents. In such cases, authorities periodically charged converts with
violating laws prohibiting the falsification of documents. Under Shari'a, as interpreted by the Government, a
non-Muslim wife who converts to Islam must divorce her "apostate,"
non-Muslim husband. Upon the wife's conversion, local security authorities
ask the non-Muslim husband if he is willing to convert to Islam; if he
chooses not to, divorce proceedings begin immediately. Custody of children
is then awarded to the mother, following her conversion to Islam and
required divorce from her husband. In April 2005, the Family Court granted the divorce of Wafaa
Riffat Adly, a Christian woman who had converted to Islam, from her
Christian husband Said Farouk Adly, after he refused to convert. An estimated several thousand persons were imprisoned
because of alleged support for or membership in Islamist groups seeking to
overthrow the Government. The Government stated that these persons were in
detention because of membership in or activities on behalf of violent
extremist groups, without regard to their religious affiliation. Internal
security services monitor groups and individuals suspected of involvement
in or planning for extremist activity. Internal security agencies
regularly detain such persons, and the state of emergency allows them to
renew periods of administrative detention ad infinitum. Forced Religious Conversion There were no reports of forced religious conversion carried
out by the Government; however, there were again reports of forced
conversions of Coptic women and girls to Islam by Muslim men. Reports of
such cases are disputed and often include inflammatory allegations and
categorical denials of kidnapping and rape. Observers, including human
rights groups, find it extremely difficult to determine whether compulsion
was used, as most cases involve a Coptic female who converts to Islam when
she marries a Muslim male. Reports of such cases almost never appear in
the local media. Early on December 9, 2004, a three-way standoff at Cairo's
Abbasiya Cathedral involving Christian protestors, orthodox church
officials, and security forces ended with the return of Wafaa' Constantin,
the wife of a Coptic Orthodox priest in the Nile Delta province of
Beheira, to the protective custody and supervision of the Church following
her apparent elopement with a Muslim man in late November. Church
officials admitted in a December 10 press conference that Wafaa' had not
been forced to convert to Islam against her will. A 6-day sit-in by Coptic Christian protestors climaxed on
the evening of December 8 when the crowd, which numbered several thousand,
responded to continued delays in the return of Wafaa' to the Church by
hurling rocks at riot police. Subsequent press reports indicated that at
least 34 Christian demonstrators were arrested (although all were
eventually released in late December and early January) and charged with
disturbing the peace, assaulting police officers, and blocking traffic.
Press reports also indicated that dozens of policemen and protestors were
injured during the clashes and stone-throwing that marked the cathedral
protests. The exact course of events that led to the Constantin
controversy remained unclear. Some commentators continued to insist that
Constantin had been the victim of a forced conversion; others stated that
the Government and the Coptic Church authorities had colluded in
preventing Constantin from converting from Christianity to Islam.
Constantin herself remained in seclusion in a church facility at the end
of the period covered by this report. There are reports in these cases of government authorities
failing to uphold the law. Local authorities sometimes allow custody of a
minor Christian female who "converts" to Islam to be transferred to a
Muslim custodian, who is likely to grant approval for an underage
marriage. Some Coptic activists maintain that government officials do not
respond effectively to instances of alleged kidnapping. In cases of
marriage between an underage Christian girl and a Muslim man, there have
been credible reports that government authorities have failed to
sufficiently cooperate with Christian families seeking to regain custody
of their daughters. In November 2004, Fadi Shamrouk, an epileptic 18-year old
Coptic Christian student at the University of Alexandria, reportedly
disappeared. When his family found him in police custody the next day,
Fadi was then reportedly transferred to the control of Ahmed Muhammad
Sayed El Batanoni, a former police lieutenant operating a law office in
Alexandria. The family alleged that El Batanoni used extortion after they
requested to see their son and were informed by police that Fadi had
converted to Islam. The family's church assisted in bringing a legal case that
alleged that because he suffers from epilepsy, his abductors exploited his
medical condition to convince him to convert to Islam. Fadi returned to
his family in May, although the circumstances of this arrangement were
unclear. On May 31, the court ruled that Fadi was not mentally ill, that
he therefore had the right to convert, but that he had not yet done so.
In February, hundreds of Christians demonstrated in Fayoum,
protesting what they viewed as the kidnapping and forced conversion of two
young women to Islam. However, there were reliable reports indicating that
the women went willingly to the security directorate to convert, after
falling in love with Muslim men. The Ministry of Interior assisted in
allowing religious consultation sessions between the women and Bishop
Ebram (Bishop of Fayoum) to be held away from the security directorate,
despite the fact that the regulations on conversion state that such
sessions must be held in the security directorate. Bishop Ebram convinced
the women to keep their faith. There were no reports of the forced religious conversion of
minor U.S. citizens who may have been abducted or illegally removed from
the United States. Improvements and Positive Developments in Respect for
Religious Freedom During the period covered by this report, the Government
took several steps to encourage religious freedom and tolerance. Al-Azhar
maintained a schedule of interfaith discussions inside the country and
abroad. The Grand Imam of Al-Azhar Sheikh Tantawi, a government appointee,
and Coptic Orthodox Pope Shenouda participated in joint public events.
In January 2004, the Government announced the formation of
the NCHR, on which 5 of the 25 appointed members are Coptic Christians.
The Council released its first report in March. Although the Council did
not address religious freedom per se, it submitted numerous requests to
the Ministry of Interior requesting action on complaints it had received
regarding church repair and construction. A prominent Coptic nongovernmental organization (NGO), the
Coptic Evangelical Organization for Social Services, continued its program
of interreligious dialogue in cooperation with the Ministry of Islamic
Religious Endowments. The program encouraged interaction between young
Muslim and Christian religious leaders and included a major conference on
citizenship and education, as well as a series of workshops, training
courses, and seminars throughout the reporting period. During the period covered by this report, the Government
continued to take steps to contain incidents of sectarian tension, most
notably its handling of the Wafaa' Constantin case. On Feb. 13, a court overruled the Government's previous
decision to prevent the Word Center for Human Rights, an organization
which often handles Coptic rights issues, from registering as an NGO. In
2003, the Ministry of Social Affairs (MSA) had rejected the Center's
application for NGO status, citing "security objections" and contended
that the Center is a group based on religion and therefore not eligible
for NGO status. The Center registered as an NGO, and at the end of the
reporting period the MSA's appeal was pending. Government-owned television and radio continued to provide
programming time devoted to Christian issues, including live broadcast of
Christmas and Easter services. The state-owned Nile Culture Channel,
available via satellite, broadcast weekly Orthodox Church services and
other Christian programming. Additionally, local television channels
offered an increasing number of documentaries on Coptic issues. Excerpts
from Coptic Orthodox Pope Shenouda's weekly public addresses,
documentaries on the country's monasteries, the travels of the Holy Family
and other aspects of Christian history, and discussions among Muslims and
Christians of local and international topics including discrimination
appeared regularly in pro-government newspapers. Christian clergy spoke on popular television programs such
as "Good Morning Egypt" about current topics and Christian religious
beliefs. A version of Sesame Street, specially designed for the country by
the Children's Television Workshop, continued to gain broad viewership
among young children and many of their parents since it was first
broadcast in 2000. Among the aims of the program is the promotion of
tolerance, and one of the principal characters is a Christian. Section III. Societal Attitudes Egyptian Muslims and Christians share a common history and
national identity. They also share the same ethnicity, race, culture, and
language. Christians are geographically dispersed throughout the country,
and Christians and Muslims live as neighbors. However, at times religious
tensions flare up and individual acts of prejudice occur. On December 5, 2004, in the Upper Egyptian village of
Mankatien, Minya Governorate, a Muslim mob reportedly attacked a new
Coptic church and damaged property belonging to Christians. Sources
reported that a Christian-owned pharmacy and home were burned down, while
the mob's attempt to burn down the church reportedly failed. In reaction
to the incidents, police imposed a curfew and arrested 15 local Muslims,
but some Christians alleged the police had been too slow to react. None of
the victims received any compensation for the damages resulting from this
incident. On March 25, near Mankatien, a Muslim motorist allegedly ran
over a group of Christian children who were walking home after attending
Friday church classes. Nermeen Kamal Malak, an 8-year old girl, was
killed; others received minor injuries. Christian villagers described the
accident as deliberate. In response, many Christian villagers in Mankatien
demonstrated, demanding an end to their 28-year wait for approval for a
reconstruction permit. The case of Ahmad and Ibrahim Nasir, who were sentenced to 7
years in prison for the 1999 murder of a monk in Assiut, remained pending
at the end of the reporting period. In May 2004, the Court of Cassation
sustained an appeal by the Public Prosecutor seeking a heavier sentence.
The brothers received 15-year prison terms, twice the original sentence
which they appealed. According to the law, persons above the age of 16 may
convert to Islam without parental consent. Ignorance of the law and social
pressure, including the centrality of marriage to a woman's identity,
often affect a girl's decision to convert. Family conflict and financial
pressure also are cited as factors. Official relations between Christian and Muslim religious
figures are amicable and include reciprocal visits to religious
celebrations. Al-Azhar and the Ministry of Awqaf engage in frequent public
and private interfaith discussions with Christians of various
denominations, both within the country and in other countries. NGOs such
as the Coptic Evangelical Organization for Social Services (CEOSS) are
active in organizing formal and informal interfaith events; during the
period covered by this report, CEOSS held numerous events which brought
together Christian and Muslim youth leaders to discuss issues such as
citizenship, media affairs, and societal violence. Private Christian
schools admit Muslim students, and religious charities serve both
communities. In articles in the independent press, prominent leaders of
the Coptic Orthodox Church criticized Mormons and Seventh-day Adventists.
In June 2004, the Ministry of Culture's Censorship
Department formed a committee of cultural figures (both Muslim and
Christian) to review a new film ("I Love the Cinema"/ "Bahebb El-Cima"),
which told the story of Egypt's Coptic Orthodox minority during the Nasser
era. After initial screenings, Muslim and Christian lawyers filed a
complaint with the Public Prosecutor, seeking to have the film removed
from distribution and the film producers tried for "contempt for religion"
because of the film's frank references to problems in the Church. A Cairo
court first rejected the case, referring it to a specialized court, which
ruled against the plaintiffs in late November 2004. Audiences were able to
see the film at a number of theaters for approximately 8 weeks during the
year. Section IV. U.S. Government Policy The subject of religious freedom is an important part of the
bilateral dialogue. The subject has been raised with senior Egyptian
government officials by all levels of the U.S. Government, including by
the Secretary of State, Assistant Secretary for Near Eastern Affairs, the
Ambassador, and other Embassy officials. The Embassy maintains formal
contacts with the Office of Human Rights at the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs. The Embassy also discusses religious freedom issues regularly in
contacts with other government officials, including governors and Members
of Parliament. The Ambassador has made public statements supporting
interfaith understanding and efforts toward harmony and equality among
citizens of all faiths. Specifically, the Embassy has raised its concerns
about official discrimination against Baha'is with the Government.
The Embassy maintains an active dialogue with the leaders of
the Christian and Muslim religious communities, human rights groups, and
other activists. The Embassy investigates every complaint of official
religious discrimination brought to its attention. The Embassy also
discusses religious freedom with a range of contacts, including academics,
businessmen, and citizens outside of the capital area. U.S. officials
actively challenge anti-Semitic articles in the media through discussions
with editors-in-chief and other journalists. U.S. programs and activities support initiatives in several
areas directly related to religious freedom, including funding for CEOSS
programs that work with Coptic community groups in Upper Egypt. The U.S. is working to strengthen civil society, supporting
secular channels and the broadening of a civic culture that promote
religious tolerance. The U.S. Embassy in Cairo supports projects that
promote tolerance and mutual respect between members of different
religious communities. The Embassy supports the development of materials that
encourage tolerance, diversity, and understanding of others, in both
Arabic-language and English-language curriculums. The U.S. developed a version of the television program
Sesame Street designed to reach remote households and which has as one of
its goals the promotion of tolerance, including among different religions.
According to a recent household survey, the program, begun in 2000, is
reaching more than 90 percent of elementary school-aged children. The Embassy is also working with the Supreme Council of
Antiquities to promote the conservation of cultural antiquities, including
Islamic, Christian, and Jewish historical sites. Released on November 8, 2005 International Religious Freedom Report Home Page | |||||
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