My name is Reverend Majed El Shafie. I'm founder and president of One Free World International, a human rights organization focusing on the rights of religious minorities around the world.
I'm here today to discuss with you three countries--Iraq, Egypt, and Pakistan--and the violations taking place in the persecution of Christians there as well as minorities.
Let me just give you the general picture of persecuted Christians around the world today. There is one persecution of a Christian every three minutes worldwide. Last year more than 165,000 Christians were killed for their faith, with 200 million to 300 million Christians persecuted worldwide. Sadly, 80% of the persecuted Christians are living in Muslim countries. Another 20% are living in Communist countries such as China, North Korea, and Cuba. Some of them live in India, at the hand of the Hindu extremists. Today I will be speaking about the specific areas of Iraq, Egypt, and Pakistan, starting with Iraq.
The population of Iraq is 27 million. The situation with the regime right now is that 4 million have been displaced; 2 million have been displaced internally and 2 million have been displaced on the border of Syria and Jordan. The population of Iraq is between 60% to 65% Shia. Between 32% to 37% is Sunni.
Even though Christianity predated Islam by a few centuries in Iraq, today in Iraq they are just a small minority, around 3%. The Christians in Iraq number around 800,000 to 1 million. Half of them have fled their homes. The other half are under attack in Iraq. Those who have fled have no jobs. Those who are on the border, for example, have no jobs. They have no medical insurance. They have no education, food, clean water--nothing, basically--and they can't return to their homes in Iraq.
Basically, they are facing attacks from extremists on both sides, from the Sunni and from the Shia, for their Christian faith. Number one, they are different, with a different faith. But two, they are Christians just as the westerners are. In extremists' eyes, they are western cooperators. They are traitors. They are just like spies. They are of the same religion as America, as the west.
The Iraqi government cannot protect them. Why can't the Iraqi government protect them? There are three reasons. Number one, the Iraqi government is a very weak government. They can't even protect themselves, basically. Second, in the Iraqi government, of the people who work in law enforcement, with the police or the army, more than 90% will be Sunni or Shia. They will take sides with their own community against the Christians there. As we will hear from a witness later on, some of the people who kidnapped his son were on the police force in Iraq.
There's another reason why I don't believe the Iraqi government can protect Christians and other minorities: Article (2). According to this article in Iraqi legislation, Islam is the official religion of the state and is the fundamental source of the legislation. No law or other religious practice--such as that of the Christians and the minorities--can counteract sharia law. So basically any kind of practice or any kind of law that's against the sharia cannot actually work in Iraq.
The Americans cannot protect them in Iraq, first of all because the Americans themselves have a bigger problem. Secondly, if the Americans protected the Christians in Iraq and the minorities in Iraq, especially the Christians, they would be proving that the Christians are actually traitors; if the Americans protected them, this would be proof that the Christians were working with the Americans. So the Americans do not protect the Christians in Iraq. They cannot protect themselves because basically they are the only unarmed group in Iraq. The Shia, the Sunni, and the Kurdish are armed groups. They are the only group that is not protected.
Where is the evidence? What is the evidence of that? As you can see in front of you, the attacks started around August 1, 2004. Five churches were bombed in one day, four in Baghdad, one in Mosul. Twelve were killed and sixty were injured, including a couple that were engaged to be married that weekend.
This is the church of St. Peter and St. Paul in Baghdad. Ten people were killed, two were injured.
This is the church of Mar Elia El Helri and the picture of Mazm Boulo, who sacrificed himself to save the people inside the church.
St. George Assyrian Church in Baghdad was attacked twice. The first time it was attacked in October 2004. Before, the cross was still standing; it was attacked again in May 2007.
This is the Church of Sayidat al-Najat, Our Lady of Salvation, Baghdad, and the Church of Sayidat al-Zohour, Our Lady of the Flowers. From 2004 until the present day the attacks continue.
Some of the priests were kidnapped and tortured. A lot of them were killed. A few of them returned home. The ones who returned home were the ones whose families paid a ransom to free them from the latest torture. Of those who returned home Father Boulos Iskander, 52 years old, was kidnapped in 2006 in Mosul. After two years he was found slaughtered in the street. After that Father Ragheed Ganni, 35 years old, was gunned down in 2007 in Mosul with three of his cantors because he refused to close the church.
As you can see, Father Ganni was shot three times in the face. One of the shots was at close range, in his eye.
Let's stop here for a second. In May 2007, in Baghdad's Dora neighbourhood, Muslim extremists forced the Christian community to pay something called jizya. What is jizya? It's basically a tax that people are forced to pay to have their lives spared. If they don't pay--and if they're poor, they cannot pay--they are basically forced to flee from the neighbourhood. And in May 2007, Christians were forced to flee out of their homes with just the clothes on their back.
The church we are seeing right now is Saint Mary's Cathedral. It was bombed on September 24. Two were killed and two were injured. We have here one of the survivors--actually, one of the heroes who tried to protect and save people as much as he could--by the name of Mr. Zia. Later he will be sharing his testimony on the events that happened in this exact church.
Mr. Chair, some people, or some politicians, or even human rights activists, call this “ethnic cleansing”. I don't know if you have ever heard this expression or not. But ethnic cleansing is a politically correct expression, and I will tell you why: saying “ethnic cleansing” is different from saying “the beginning of genocide”.
This is not ethnic cleansing. This is genocide. This is the beginning of the genocide of the Christian community in Iraq. Of course, if we said it was genocide, this would force governments to take action. According to the International Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, you must take action if there is genocide.
So what people say is that this is ethnic cleansing. But it's not ethnic cleansing. It's genocide. And I will prove it to you by reading to you from the convention:
In the present Convention, genocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such:
(a) Killing members of the group;
(b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;
(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;
All of these conditions exist today in Iraq. When you try to kill, when you try to force all of them to leave, when you try to kill the community, when you try to put conditions on lives, such as paying jizya, this is the beginning of genocide. This is not ethnic cleansing. This is the straightforward beginning of genocide.
Turning to Egypt--I'm trying to hurry because of the time--I will speak about three groups: the persecuted Christians in Egypt, the Jewish community and the rise of anti-Semitism in Egypt, and the Baha'i community.
I'll give you a historical fact about Egypt. It was a Christian country in the 7th century, until a man by the name of 'Amr ibn al-'As entered Egypt. He basically fought with the Christians and killed most of them. He forced the rest of them to convert to Islam. And today, Egypt as we know it is a Muslim country.
Christians today make up around 10% of the population of around 82 million. So approximately 8 million to 10 million Egyptians are Christian.
As we're talking right now--in this beautiful and wonderful place, the temple of freedom in Canada--there are between 6,000 to 7,000 Christian activists jailed in Egypt. They are simply asking for their rights.
According to Egyptian law--called the El-Khat El-Hamayouni law--you cannot build churches. You can build mosques, you can build bars, you can build discotheques or whatever you want to build, but you cannot build churches. This is under the Egyptian El-Khat El-Hamayouni law. You cannot even rebuild or fix the old churches. If you need to fix your old church, you need permission from the president himself which can take 40 years to get.
Christians are being attacked on a daily basis. There are some light attacks and some heavy attacks. One of the heavy attacks was the El Kosheh massacre in January 2000. This was a second attack on the same village, the El Kosheh village, related to another attack in 1998.
In the year 2000, mobs of Muslim extremists went to the village and started to attack the Christian community. Twenty-one Christians were killed. Hundreds of homes and shops were destroyed. No arrests were made and basically nobody was ever found guilty. Moreover, there were over 1,000 Christians--they were the victims--arrested by the Egyptian authorities, and the Egyptian authorities did not arrest the ones who committed this crime. They went and arrested over 1,000 Christians in El Kosheh Village. This happened in the year 2000.
Now the Egyptian government denied it, and said they'd challenge us to find the name of even one person who had been arrested. The Egyptian government was right: we did not succeed in bringing one name. In my hand, I have the names of 1,014 people who were arrested, their addresses, their age, and how they were tortured, the date of their arrest, and the date of their release. I have this in my hand, and I am ready to give it to the committee. It is still in Arabic, so I can translate it and give it to you, whatever you like.
In October 2005 a church in Alexandria had a play called I Was Blind but Now I Can See. The play was about a Christian who converted to Islam and converted back again to Christianity. The Muslim community wasn't very happy about it. Five thousand Muslims attacked the church. Ninety people were injured, including a nun who was stabbed, and four people were killed. The police tried to stop the demonstration, but they didn't succeed 100%.
At another incident during a pre-Easter celebration on April 14, 2006, three armed men with knives went to three churches in Alexandria--the Church of Mar Girgis, Saints Church in Sidi Bishr, and the church in Abu Qir. The police were there to provide security. They didn't do anything to stop the three men with the knives. They attacked the church in the pre-Easter celebration. One person was killed and 12 were wounded. The police arrested one and said that he was mentally ill, and basically he was released after that.
The next day at the funerals for the victims, the police attacked, and there was a clash between the authorities and the Christian communities.
On May 11, 2007, seven Christian shops and several homes were set on fire in the village of Behma in the south of Egypt. At least 10 Christians were hurt, some with first-degree burns, some with broken bones. This was all sparked by rumours that the Christian community was building a church without a permit. This was a rumour.
After the Friday prayer, the imam, or the head of the local mosque in this area, asked the Muslim community to stand up and protect the Christian community. This imam, this Muslim preacher, is paid by the Egyptian government. His salary comes from the Egyptian government. The attacks occurred May 11, 2007. The police arrested several Muslims, and after that they were released immediately, and no one was found guilty.
Two weeks ago, on Saturday, May 31, 2008, in a monastery by the name of Deir Abu-Fana, 30 kilometres south of Minya in upper Egypt, at 5 p.m., 70 armed men attacked the monastery, burned the bibles, and destroyed the cross and the altar. Three monks were kidnapped and four other monks were hurt.
Then there's the case of Mr. Magdi Youssef.
By the way, Mr. Youssef was supposed to be one of our witnesses today. He didn't come because he has a daughter in Egypt, and he's worried about her safety.
Canada was involved in the case of Magdi Youssef. He's a Coptic Christian who came to Canada asking for refugee status because he was persecuted back home. The Immigration and Refugee Board basically said that there was no persecution of Christians in Egypt, that he was lying. They sent him back to Egypt. He was deported on September 14, 2006.
Upon Mr. Youssef's arrival at Cairo airport, he was arrested by SSI, state security intelligence. He was tortured in Tanta, at the SSI headquarters, by two officers. The first officer was El Hegab and the second officer was Farok Hosney. Both of them tortured him.
We took the case to the Canadian government. The Honourable Jason Kenney helped us a lot on this case. We thank him very much for standing with Magdi Youssef, who today is here in Canada--but only after paying a very high price; he was tortured twice in his life.
I'd now like to mention the Jewish community in Egypt and the rise of anti-Semitism. The Jewish community in Egypt is only around 100 to 200 people, and most of them are elders. Even with the peace agreement between the Egyptians and Israel for more than 25 years now, there is rising anti-Semitism in the schools, in the education system, in the media, raising new generations to hate, basically. There is hostile propaganda--in both official and unofficial fora--calling Jewish people Nazis and cold-blooded killers, and denying the Holocaust.
One form of hostile propaganda is through the Al-Ahram newspaper, which is basically the official newspaper in Egypt. It is paid for by the Egyptian government and it is controlled by the Egyptian government. The chief editor of this newspaper, Mr. Ibrahim Nafi, was appointed by the Egyptian President.
On October 10, 2000, Ibrahim Nafi issued an article saying that the Jewish people used Arab children's blood to make Passover matzos. This was an article that Ibrahim Nafi wrote in Al-Ahram, the official newspaper of Egypt.
He was sued by the International League against Racism and Anti-Semitism in Paris. The French court called him, but he refused to appear in front of the court. His excuse was his medical condition. The guy had travelled to something like 35 different countries, yet he couldn't go to France.
There have been cartoons in the Egyptian newspapers insulting Christians and Jews. In one cartoon, Bush is holding the cross as a crusader, speaking on behalf of the Christian faith. With regard to anti-Semitism, on 21 April, 2001, there were cartoons showing Israelis squeezing Palestinians and drinking their blood. This was in 2001, but from March 6 to 12, 2008, the Al-Ahram Weekly, which is an Egyptian government newspaper, published a cartoon of Barak and Olmert holding Palestinian children and cooking them in a pot. On the pot is written “Holocaust”, and they are eating the children.
On March 6, 2008, a cartoon was published of Ehud Barak standing on a pile of...skulls, I think, is the word. English is not my first language, and when I get tired I really lose it. I'm sorry about that. It has been a very stressful day from the beginning.
Ehud Barak is standing on a pile of dead Palestinians. He is asking the Israeli Air Force to kill all the Palestinians and to cause a holocaust, and he's waving a swastika.
On February 7, 2008, when Hamas was crossing the border into Egypt, there was a cartoon that was published, basically, of Egypt in the shape of a woman asking Hamas not to attack the border of Egypt, to attack the Israelis, and this was published in the Egyptian newspaper.
I have here a social studies book for the seventh grade of the Egyptian educational system. On page 2, Israel is not on the map. On pages 73 to 75, basically the book is teaching seventh grade children that you cannot trust the Jewish community, that they are the enemy, that you must fight them, and that peace with them is useless. This is in the seventh grade school books in the Egyptian schools.
Finally, regarding the Baha'i community, I will not speak too much about the community, because Susanne is here and she will be completing my testimony. She's my dear friend, she is a wonderful person, and she will take it from there for me.
Egypt has acceded to the convention against torture. Moreover, Egypt has signed the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, as well as the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. The Egyptian government is obligated to respect the rights of the individuals and the groups in their country, but they fail to fulfill this commitment and to respect their agreements.
I'll end by speaking about Pakistan. Pakistan is an Islamic republic with a population of around 125 million. It was created by its 1947 independence and the separation of India into Hindu India and Muslim Pakistan. Muslims in Pakistan make up around 97% of the population: Sunnis 77%; and Shias 20%. The other minorities make up around 3%, including 1.69% Christians, as well as Hindus, Ahmadis, and the rest of them.
There are three subjects I will be discussing about Pakistan. Their blasphemy law, sections 295-B and 295-C of the Pakistani penal code, started in the early 1980s. The blasphemy law is this: if you say anything against the Prophet Muhammad, against Islam, against the Koran, if you discuss the idea of Islam, if you argue about Islam or have anything negative about Islam, you deserve the death penalty immediately. This is what sections 295-B and 295-C are all about in Pakistan.
This law has been used regularly since then to terrorize the minorities and has been used in personal disputes and as tools to persecute and discriminate against them.
For example, Jagdish Kumar, 22 years old, a young Hindu working in a leather factory in Karachi, basically had a discussion with his Muslim co-workers about what Islam is. In the end, his co-workers said he committed a crime against the blasphemy law, and they killed him on the spot. They beat him to death, a young Hindu man.
Dr. Robin Sardar, on May 2, 2008, was charged with blasphemy in Hafizabad. He was accused of committing a crime under the blasphemy law because he made remarks about the Prophet Muhammad's beard. His family was attacked. Police arrested him, and now he's in jail facing the death penalty. Our sources indicate that two of his clients had a personal dispute with him. Dr. Sardar served his community for over 30 years, helping the poor, and in the end he is now thrown in jail for no specific reasons.
The second issue in Pakistan that I will be speaking about is rape, the rape of Christian girls from the Christian community and other minorities. Our sources indicate that there are over 300 cases a year of rape of Christian girls and minorities. It happens every year. Now, I'm not talking just about rape as a crime in Pakistan, because Pakistan is the worst country when it comes to the crime of rape. Pakistan, according to the Pakistani human rights commission, has 8 rape cases every day. That's around 3,000 rape cases in Pakistan every year—3,000.
That does not include a husband raping his wife, because in Pakistani law, it's not considered wrong when a husband rapes his wife or when a man rapes a woman whom he will be marrying later. They will not report that, because it's not wrong under Pakistani law. I'm not talking about that, because the rape law in Pakistan is a whole other story. We need a different committee for that.
Under the law in Pakistan, every woman who has been raped needs to bring four male witnesses to support her claim that she has been raped, and if she does not bring four male witnesses, she will be accused of zina, which is adultery, or she will be accused of qazf, which is basically a false accusation. She will end up in jail if she doesn't have four male witnesses.
I'm not talking about this. I'm talking about the 300 cases of rape against Christian girls and other minorities in Pakistan, which have been used to force them to convert to Islam, or as a punishment to their family for not converting to Islam, such as what happened with Neeha Moner. She is two and half years old; her father was a farmer, a Christian farmer, who was told by the owner of the farm to convert to Islam, and he told him, no, I respect you, you respect me, and everybody has their own beliefs. So the son of the owner of the farm, 18 years old, Abid Huseen, attacked the girl when she was two and half years old. He raped her.
Please show the tape. This is an interview about Neeha.
[Video Presentation]
What you will see next is a brick factory in Pakistan. In this factory in Pakistan, minorities have basically been used to work as slaves. Basically, the owners go to them and tell them, we'll give you a loan, we'll give you a salary; you come and work in this brick factory. When they go to work there, they basically have no salary--there is nothing--and they become slaves working in the brick factory. They've been tortured. And there is child labour, as you will see.
[Video Presentation]
There are brick factories in about five locations in Pakistan. This is the one we visited last February, about an hour and a half south of Lahore. The people have basically been tortured and persecuted. Whoever tries to run away will have fingers chopped off. The only way to get out of there is to choose among two options: give them their kidney or convert to Islam.
Mr. Chair, I'm sorry for taking such a long time. In closing, I will not give recommendations and I will not say my closing remarks. The only thing I will tell all of you is that I thank you for hearing this evidence. I thank you for inviting us. I don't know why there is persecution. I don't know why people persecute people because they are different, but that's what I know. I know that freedom is bulletproof. I know that we will prevail. I know that they can kill the dreamer, but nobody can kill the dream.
Thank you, and God bless you. I rest my case.