oped: Those moderate Muslim folks sure are nice. They’re not violent or radical at all, like the terrorists we’re fighting! Well, they’re not radical until you do something they don’t like… then they get real radical, real quick.
note: As Egypt President Mohamed Morsi issued a controversial decree Thursday, reports emerged that his Twitter account was blocking those who criticized him.
@EgyPresidency
By Julian Robinson for MailOnline
Three
Christian teenagers have been jailed for five years in Egypt after they
were deemed to have mocked Muslim prayers in a video.
The
Coptic Christians were sentenced for contempt of Islam by a judge in
the central Egyptian province of Minya while a fourth defendant, 15, was
handed a juvenile detention for an indefinite period.
Defence
lawyer Maher Naguib said the four had not intended to insult Islam in
the video, but merely to mock the beheadings carried out by ISIS
jihadists.
The video
was filmed on a mobile phone in January 2015 when the three teenagers,
who were sentenced to five years, were aged between 15 and 17.
Their teacher who is also seen in the video has already been sentenced to three years in jail.
The four teenagers were still free as of Thursday and Naguib said he planned to appeal the judgement.
'They have been sentenced for contempt of Islam and inciting sectarian strife,' Naguib told AFP.
'The judge didn't show any mercy. He handed down the maximum punishment.'
In
the video, one teenager can be seen kneeling on the ground and reciting
Muslim prayers while others stand behind him, laughing
Later one of them is seen making a sign with his thumb to indicate the beheading of the one who is kneeling.
The
Egyptian Commission for Rights and Freedoms, an independent rights
group, said ahead of Thursday's judgement that it watched the video and
found that the four teenagers were performing scenes 'imitating
slaughter carried out by terrorist groups'.
The
Commission said in a statement that the four were detained for 45 days
and subjected to 'ill-treatment' before being released pending trial.
The
group warned that there was a return 'of using contempt of religion as
accusations against writers and religious minorities'.
Another
rights group, the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights, said that
between 2011 and 2013, 42 defendants were tried in similar cases and of
them 27 were convicted.
[Writer Fatima Naoot (pictured) was recently jailed for three years for
insulting Islam after she criticised the slaughter of animals during a
major religious festival ]
Egypt's
constitution outlaws insults against the three monotheist religions
recognised by the state -- Islam, Christianity and Judaism.
Copts,
who comprise up to 10 percent of Egypt's 90-million population, are the
Middle East's largest religious minority. They have long suffered
sectarian violence including attacks on churches.
In
2014, a Coptic Christian teacher was jailed for six months after
parents of her students accused her of evangelising and of insulting
Islam.
In
a separate case the same year, a Coptic man was sentenced to six years
for insulting Islam, after posting a picture of prophet Mohammed on his
Facebook page with an insulting comment.
Thursday's
judgement comes a month after female writer Fatima Naoot was jailed for
three years for insulting Islam after she criticised the slaughter of
animals during a major religious festival.
And
in December, an Egyptian court jailed controversial Muslim scholar
Islam al-Behairy for one year for remarks he made on his television
programme, in which he called for reforms in 'traditional Islamic
discourse'.
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