DALGA, Egypt
(AP) -- Islamic militants on motorbikes drive by Sameer Hanna Tanyous's
home in this southern Egyptian town and make a chilling gesture -
running their fingers across their throats. Others, he says, shout
warnings that security forces won't be there forever to protect him and
other Christians.
This week, a large
contingent of troops and police rolled into Dalga, backed by helicopter
gunships, breaking the hold of Islamist hard-liners who seized control
of the town of 120,000 in early July in a spasm of violence after the
ouster of President Mohammed Morsi. Their grip terrorized the town's
Christians, as hard-liners torched and looted their homes, businesses
and churches.
But the relief felt by the
town's estimated 20,000 Christians was short-lived. They fear the troops
will stay only long enough to make some arrests - and once they're
gone, the backlash from militants against them will be even worse.
"We
are too scared to talk even now with all this hokouma (government) in
town," Tanyous, a 40-year-old door-to-door salesman, said at the house
of a local Coptic Orthodox priest. "One day, all this police and army
will go and we will have no one on our side."
Tanyous
fled his home when a Muslim mob looted and torched it in mid-August,
taken in with his wife and children by a Muslim family. Emboldened by
the troops' presence, they returned this week to live in the burned-out,
windowless husk. Immediately, the threats began, he said.
The
predicament of Dalga's Christians reflects that of the minority
community across the country, especially in the rural communities of the
south, where religious conservatism is prevalent among Muslims and
hard-line Islamists wield considerable influence.
Egypt's
Christians have long complained of discrimination, but their situation
dramatically worsened during Morsi's year in office, when Islamists
became bolder in imposing their views. After the military ousted Morsi
on July 3, his hard-line supporters unleashed a backlash of violence
that largely targeted Christians, whom they accused of pushing for his
removal. Christian homes and businesses around the country were
attacked, particularly in provinces of the south, like Minya, where
Dalga is located.
Security forces that retook
control of Dalga on Monday have detained at least 130 militants. Troops
backed by armored fighting vehicles check cars and pedestrians entering
and leaving town, while policemen in pickup trucks cruise the streets.
The
forces have been raiding homes searching for suspected militants and at
times fire in the air or use tear gas to disperse pro-Morsi protests.
The local police station is now home to a half dozen police generals and
hundreds of policemen, with police in full riot gear milling around.
To
Dalga's Islamists, the assault by the security forces on their town is
another crime by military chief Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, whom they accuse
of overturning the democratic process by removing Morsi following mass
protests demanding his ouster.
Local Islamists accuse the troops of random arrests and abuses. Some hint they will start lashing back.
"They
had better withdraw quickly or there will be bloodshed," said Younis
el-Shareef, a 25-year-old student and part-time businessman.
Another Islamist, Ali Hassan, warned, "The town is inching closer to a massacre."
For
Dalga's Christians, two months under Islamist control felt like being
thrown back centuries into a rule where they were relegated to a
rights-less status.
The town, 270 kilometers
(160 miles) south of Cairo, saw no major sectarian violence for decades,
residents said. But in recent years, its Muslims grew more
conservative, and a radical Islamist presence began to grow.
After
Morsi, of the Muslim Brotherhood, became Egypt's first freely elected
president in June 2012, "many of the Muslims began to behave arrogantly.
They acted like every one of them was Morsi himself," said Father
Abraam, a Coptic priest. Police complaints by Christians against Muslims
in routine disputes were ignored by police, he said.
"Every time we filed a complaint, we were told to go and work it out with the Muslim party," he said.
After
Morsi's fall, mobs of hard-liners, many believed to belong to the
Brotherhood and the Gamaa Islamiya - which waged an armed insurgency in
the 1990s - along with gangs of local criminals, drove out the town's
police.
Nearly 40 Christian homes and stores
were attacked in violence that accelerated after security forces
launched a bloody crackdown on pro-Morsi protests in Cairo in
mid-August. Dalga's only Catholic church was ransacked and set ablaze
along with the Orthodox Monastery of the Virgin Mary and St. Abraam. The
Anglican church was looted.
Gunmen repeatedly
fended off police and troops trying to reenter Dalga. Christian
families that remained paid armed Muslims for protection - something the
Christians compared to "jizya," a tax on non-Muslims that is allowed
under Shariah, or Islamic law, but has long been abandoned.
Some 50 Christian families fled Dalga, and none is thought to have come back.
This
week, Abraam and several Christian men gathered at his house over tea,
saying many of the town's Muslims supported the Christians after July 3,
helping protect the churches. But, Abraam added, they could not do much
when hundreds of Islamists attacked Christian properties in mid-August.
"Still, I believe the elders from their big families could have done more to stop the violence," Abraam said.
Another
Coptic priest, Father Ioannis, however, said that while in some cases
the stories were true, Christians were also exaggerating the accounts of
help by Muslim neighbors - keeping the future in mind.
"The
government and its forces are not going to be here for long and when
they are gone we go back to living with Muslims, just us and them," he
said.
The events sharply divide the town.
Gaber Mikhail, a businessman and a church servant, said he was nearly
beaten up by a crowd of Muslims Tuesday when he showed an Egyptian TV
station crew around the burned monastery. He argued with the men that he
had praised the town Muslims for trying to protect Christians.
Finally, a Muslim man hustled him away from the angry crowd, said Mikhail.
When
the Associated Press and several local media representatives this week
interviewed Christians living in a narrow alley in Dalga, a hostile
crowd of Muslim men and children chanted against what they called media
bias against Islamists.
As tension built up
and voices became louder, the Christians became visibly frightened and
spoke of the threats they still face even with troops and police in the
town. With alarmed faces, Christian women and children hid behind
windows to watch the argument heating up.
"We are still frightened and worried that they will come back," said Hanna Khalil, a 48-year-old mother of five.
When
her house was torched in August, Khalil sent three of her children to
relatives in Cairo, then moved with her two others and her husband into a
Muslim-owned house in Dalga. A week ago, she moved in with relatives,
bringing along Mabrouka, a cow that her husband rescued from their home
before the mob burned it.
Khalil said she has little faith el-Sissi would go out of his way to help Christians.
"All we want is security," she said. "Justice is sweet and that is what I want for myself and my family."
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