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Displacement of Copts raises persecution fears in Egypt

The forced displacement of five Christian families from the Beni Suef governorate in Egypt brought back the debate of the struggle between Muslims and Copts in Egypt.
Coptic Christians remove a picture of Pope Shenoda III from the gate of the main cathedral in Cairo during clashes with Muslims standing outside the cathedral April 7, 2013. Clashes broke out between Coptic Christians and Muslims in central Cairo on Sunday after the funeral of four Copts killed in sectarian violence outside the Egyptian capital on Friday night, witnesses said.  REUTERS/Asmaa Waguih (EGYPT - Tags: RELIGION CIVIL UNREST) - RTXYC6T
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CAIRO — Five Coptic Christian families consisting of 18 members from the village of Kafr Darwish in al-Fashn, Beni Suef governorate, were forcibly displaced on May 22 after Ayman Youssef Tawfik, a young member of one the displaced families, published in May caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad on his Facebook page. A displacement sentence was issued on May 25 during a customary court hearing in Kafr Dahshur.

However, this customary court does not represent the state, as it involves customary arbitrators who derive their legitimacy from tribe members or from being located in a specific residential area. The arbitrators’ sentences are based on customs that are associated with their own culture and their geographic location. Regular courts base their sentences on physical evidence and their judges are graduates of law schools.

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