Egyptian sentenced to death for murder of Christian doctor
CAIRO: An Egyptian man affiliated with Daesh was sentenced to death
Saturday in the fatal stabbing of an 82-year-old Christian doctor in
Cairo in Sept. 2017.
The assailant, identified as 40-year-old Hassan G., pretended to be a
patient to gain access to the doctor, identified as Dr. Tharwat. Once
admitted to the clinic’s examination room he began stabbing the elderly
doctor. When the doctor’s assistant, Susan K., attempted to intervene,
she was also stabbed.
During the trial, prosecutors said the defendant had embraced the extremist ideology of Daesh.
At the time of the incident, the Ministry of Interior reported that the
defendant’s motivation was believed to be financial. He was unemployed
and facing financial difficulties and intended to rob the doctor, it was
believed.
Saturday’s verdict will be sent to the Grand Mufti, Egypt’s top Muslim
cleric, for ratification. While the Grand Mufti’s opinions are not
binding, he is customarily asked to review death sentences and his
recommendation is often followed.
Also on Saturday, another Egyptian court sentenced one Egyptian to death
and six others to 10 years in prison. The defendants had appealed a
similar Dec. 2016 sentence over an attack on policemen and soldiers
north of Cairo; most attacks on police, military and civilians in Egypt
over the last few years have been claimed by the Daesh.
Daesh, which has gained a foothold in the remote areas of Egypt’s Sinai
Peninsula, has vowed to target Egypt’s Christian minority in retaliation
for their support of President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi.
In early November, Daesh claimed credit for an attack on a bus carrying
Christian pilgrims outside the Monastery of St. Samuel that left seven
dead and wounded 19 – in nearly the same location that another attack
killed 28 pilgrims in May 2017. In response, the Ministry of Interior
announced two days later that 19 “militants” linked to the attack had
been killed.
Elected in 2014, El-Sisi has cracked down on the Muslim Brotherhood and
other Islamic groups since coming to power after Muslim Brotherhood
ex-President Muhammad Mursi was removed from power in the summer of
2013. Mursi’s ouster came after mass protests calling for the removal of
the Muslim Brotherhood. Daesh blames El-Sisi for the ensuing crackdown
on Mursi’s followers.
The Coptic Orthodox leadership and many other Christians supported
El-Sisi in the wake of Mursi’s ouster, hoping he could protect them
against violent attacks by Islamists.
Groups affiliated with Daesh have claimed responsibility for numerous
attacks against Christians in the four years since El-Sisi’s election.
In 2015, the group posted a video of the beheading of a dozen Christian
Egyptians in Libya.
In December 2016, a suicide bomber killed 29 in an attack on St. Mark’s
Cathedral compound in Cairo. Daesh took credit for killing nearly 80
Egyptian Christians and wounding over 150 in 2017 in two Palm Sunday
bombings and attacks on buses carrying Christians. Last month, an
Egyptian military court sentenced 17 to death for the fatal attacks.
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