Girls and boys targeted for kidnap and conversion. Release urges Egypt to protect its Christian minority.
Christian girls in Egypt are being targeted for kidnapping, forced
marriage and conversion, says Release International, which supports
persecuted Christians around the world.
Release describes
an epidemic of grooming, forced conversion and kidnapping, believed to
be funded by religious leaders with cash from Saudi Arabia. And the
latest target is young Christian boys.
Release believes
this a deliberate strategy of persecution and is urging Egypt to
protect its vulnerable Christian minority.
Hundreds of
Coptic Christian girls in Egypt have been kidnapped, forced to convert
and marry their captors, according to both Egyptian and western
sources.
Many abductions take place in Upper Egypt, a
poor, rural area many miles from Cairo where attitudes are ultra
conservative and the persecution of Christians is most severe.
Militants set fire to many churches here during the Islamic
revolution.
Names have been changed to protect those
working in Egypt.
'Kate Ward' works with UK-based Release.
She says their Egyptian partners are in direct contact with 2,500
families who daily face the problem of kidnapping.
'Our
partners are dealing with this problem all the time. The kidnappers
target girls as young as nine and develop friendships with them. They
offer gifts to them and groom them until they are considered sexually
mature, from the age of 14.'
Release partner 'Abouna'
works in communities where kidnappings are taking place and supports
the victims. He says young women and girls are targeted as part of a
deliberate strategy to convert Christians to Islam.
'They
start with seducing the young girls, especially the non-educated girls
by telephone calls - mobiles are now in every hand. They start to have
affairs with them. And after a while, they convince them to marry and
the girl finds herself trapped.'
'Frances Windsor' has
lived and worked in Cairo for many years. She believes vulnerable
girls living in poverty make the softest targets for seduction and
conversion.
'It happens mostly when families are losing
hope, because of poverty. A young girl will be targeted by a slightly
older, handsome, charming young man. He will make friends with her and
treat her with great respect, and be kind to her and offer her romance
and excitement and promises of riches.
'And then he'll
seduce her and she will marry him. Then the situation dramatically
changes and she effectively becomes a slave and is mistreated by the
wider family.'
Time and again, Release International is
hearing that local men are being offered money to target Christian
women.
'There are rewards for every young man who can
seduce a girl to convert to Islam,' says Abouna.
Adds Kate
Ward: 'He will be paid, according to our information, £1500 for a
non-educated woman or £3000 for an educated woman. After that, he
might divorce them. She then goes back to a life of shame. The money
is coming from religious leaders, who many believe are paid from Saudi
Arabia.'
The girls are often told that when they have
children, they will be able to bring them up as Christians. But this
is a lie, says Kate Ward:
'He will say, "Don't worry,
you'll be able to stay Christian. And when your children are born,
we'll decide what we can do." But in practice, these wives are now
considered to have become Muslims. And even if they leave, their
children will be forced to remain.
'Our partners have
spoken to families who have had letters back from their daughters
saying, "Take care of our sisters, we are now in a trap." If they do
manage to escape, often many years later, they lose their
children.'
Abouna has managed to help some of these girls
to get away. Some apply for refugee status overseas. 'But we prefer
the majority to remain in Egypt,' he says, 'as society has to face
this one day.'
One of the biggest problems facing kidnap
victims and their families is the shame attached to the sexual
compromising of the girls.
'All of the girls are injured
inside,' says Abouna. 'The feeling of shame and infamy is very strong.
So, the girl may be afraid to turn back to her family.'
He
says many of the girls are young and illiterate and fear their
families will reject them or harm them if they return.
Abouna says the Egyptian media has been reluctant to report the
outbreak of grooming and kidnapping. And others say that reluctance is
shared by the police, because of the religious dimension to the crime.
But the evidence is mounting up from Release partners and
others who are dealing directly with the victims. Release contact
Frances Windsor says many in the church are now having to address the
problem:
'I know heartbroken families who have seen this
happen to friends of theirs. Priests and monks and pastors have people
in the flock that this has happened to. And many families live in fear
this will happen to them.'
Release partners say they have
also spotted a new and disturbing trend within Egypt, says Kate Ward:
'They are beginning to target boys and young men.
'We're
hearing of Christian mothers who are invited to bring their boys to
the mosque to get Islamic teaching. They will get paid 300 Egyptian
pounds when they take their sons to be educated at the mosque.'
Extreme poverty makes them easy targets, she says.
But
the militants are combining this with another strategy, she believes,
of targeting strong Christian families. 'They aim to bring shame on
these families and lead to the destruction of the family itself.
"We are talking about the intentional destruction of strong
families by targeting the most vulnerable. Thirty years ago, they had
heard nothing of this. This is new.'
Egyptians trace the
rise of kidnapping back some 50 years. But the problem grew to
epidemic proportions during Egypt's revolution, when the Muslim
Brotherhood came to power. Foreign money poured into Egypt - cash from
militants available to anyone who would kidnap Christians and force
them to convert.
Kate Ward describes the assault on
Christians as 'a deliberate attempt to rid Egypt of its Christian
minority by militants, who refuse to tolerate any other faith or any
other people in their land.'
She adds: 'This grooming
epidemic is a tool and strategy of religious persecution. We urge the
authorities to protect their most vulnerable citizens - the Christian
girls and women of Egypt.'
Release International is
working with partners in Egypt to help Christian communities reduce
the risk of grooming and kidnapping, and to support victims. Release
is helping develop spiritual resilience, tackle the lack of education
and respond to the oppression and poverty that lie at the root of the
problem in Egypt.