Authorities have captured the man alleged to be responsible for killing one Egyptian Christian and injuring five others on a northbound train in Upper Egypt, security sources said on Tuesday evening (January 11, 2010), reports Dan Wooding, Founder of ASSIST Ministries. Media sources say that a gunman entered the train while it was stationed at the southern Egyptian city of Samalout in the Minya governorate, some 161 miles south of Cairo. Security sources said that the assailant had checked passengers for the green cross traditionally tattooed on the wrists of Coptic Christians in Egypt. After identifying several Copts, the culprit killed one of them and injured five others. The same sources said that investigators are currently looking into the possibility that the assailant was a policeman. Egyptian police on Tuesday fired tear gas to disperse Coptic Christian demonstrators protesting the killing of the 71-year-old Coptic man by a gunman who boarded a train in Upper Egypt and opened fire on Christians. Egyptian journalist, Assad Elepty, told the ASSIST News Service, “It saddens me to report on yet another attack on innocent Christians in Egypt. “Whilst His Holiness Pope Shenouda III of the Coptic Church has flown to the United States (on Sunday), to have a medical check-up and treatment, there is no doubt he will be dismayed to here of another attack on his Coptic children. “At the same time, the Mubarak regime has responded to Pope Benedict XVI’s call on Egypt, and other predominantly Muslim nations, to do more to protect their Christian populations after a spate of recent violent episodes. “Rather than heed the plea from Pope Benedict, the Mubarak Government reacted by recalling its ambassador from the Vatican on Tuesday,” he said. The Egyptian Foreign Ministry said in a statement, “We will not allow any non-Egyptian party to intervene in our internal affairs under any pretext.” “The gunman, identified as Amer Ashour Abdelzaher, was an off-duty Muslim policeman who fired his service handgun at innocent civilians because they are Christians,” revealed Elepty. “An Interior Ministry statement said authorities had arrested the gunman, a Muslim, and were actively seeking a motive for the shooting. The gunman, was on his way to work, boarded the train in Minya province, an area south of Cairo along the Nile that has a sizeable Christian population.” Elepty went on to tell ANS, “The Interior Ministry statement identified the victim as Fathy Said Ebeid, 71, and said the wounded included his wife, another man and three other women. “Word of the shooting quickly reignited the raw emotions of Egypt’s Coptic Christian population, still smoldering after the bombing of a Coptic Christian church less than two weeks ago that left 23 people dead and led to widespread protests and calls for security. “More than 200 shocked Copts converged outside a hospital where the wounded from the train were taken, and police dispersed them with tear gas, battens and threatened to fire rubber bullets at them.” A Coptic bishop told AFP that the gunman, named by the ministry as Amer Ashur Abdel Zaher, had sought out Christians on board the train and shouted a Muslim slogan – “Allahu Akbar” (God is greatest) -- as he opened fire. The Egyptian journalist continued, “The policeman, who was said to be on his way to work, boarded a stationary Cairo-bound train at Samalout, in the southern Minya province, and began shooting with his service weapon, the ministry said. “He killed Fathi Said Ebeid, aged 71, and wounded his 61-year-old wife. Two of the others wounded were said to be in critical condition. “The policeman, who was not in uniform, got off the train after the attack and tried to flee but was arrested inside the station, He was being questioned by the authorities to find out if he carried out the attack for religious reasons.” Bishop Morcos, who serves with the Coptic Church in Samalout, said he had spoken to witnesses after the shooting. “This lunatic went up and down the coach looking for Christians,” the bishop recounted. “Seeing a group of girls and women who were not wearing the (Islamic) veil, he took them for Christians and fired, shouting ‘Allahu Akbar.’” Elepty stated that the attack comes after the deadly New Year's bombing in the northern city of Alexandria that drew international condemnation. “No one has yet claimed responsibility for that attack, which came after threats to Egypt's Copts from the Al-Qaeda-linked group in Iraq that claimed a deadly October 31 attack on a Baghdad cathedral,” he said. “The group, the Islamic State of Iraq, said it would attack Copts if their church failed to release two women the group claimed were being held against their will after converting to Islam. President Hosni Mubarak has blamed ‘foreign hands’ as being behind the incident, and authorities said a suicide bomber was responsible. “Copts make up at least 10 percent of Egypt's mostly Muslim population of 80 million people; have been repeatedly targeted and murdered,” said Elepty. “While Egypt has been under tight security since the Alexandria bombing, the shooting was committed by a police officer entrusted with protecting the Copts.” He concluded by saying, “The latest incident leaves no doubt that many in the mainstream Muslim community of Egypt despise the Christian Copts and harbor ill feeling towards them. “Mubarak has lost control of Egypt. It anticipates the situation in Egypt will rapidly deteriorate. There is much speculation the Copts are been used as pawns to promote civil unrest in the lead up to the Presidential elections earmarked for September 2011. The Egyptian community is opposed to the transition of power to Mubarak's youngest son, Gamal. By all accounts Gamal is a decent well-educated liberal-minded individual. Therefore, the Muslim Community does not want a person of his caliber.”
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