Yes, it is definitely worrying to the Coptic community in Egypt, although I don't want to speak on behalf of that community. It's a large and diverse community that has many ways of putting forward their own cause and demands. Some of them would prefer to remain campaigning at the local level because they would obtain better results this way. Some of them would like to internationalize their case and put peer pressure, government pressure, on them. So we have to bear this in mind when speaking globally of the Coptic community.
I think it's fair for Amnesty to say that the Coptic community feels threatened, or at least some members of it feel threatened, from the mounting discourse against them, against their freedoms: their freedom to worship, to meet, to assemble at mass on Christmas Eve and New Year's. The track record of the security forces shows that they are not providing protection. I think it's the obligation of the state to protect a community from attacks by individuals and non-state actors. That responsibility is the state's.
On forced conversions of Christian children, I haven't personally heard of that. Amnesty has not researched the matter, so I don't want to say yes or no on whether it's happening or not. It may be happening in individual cases, but the question is how much of a system—