Muslim Trafficking Networks Target Coptic Christian Women


Tuesday, October 09, 2012

Muslim Trafficking Networks Target Coptic Christian Women

COPTS

Where is the shock and outrage, or is that only reserved for AFDI ads (above)?

“Muslim Trafficking Networks Target Coptic WomenCBN, October 8. 2012

CAIRO, Egypt — Recent attacks against churches are driving thousands of Egyptian Christians to seek asylum in the West.

Many of them are women who fear they are targets for abduction, forced conversion, and forced marriage by Muslims.

CBN News traveled to Cairo to investigate the trafficking of young Egyptian Christian women.

The Abduction of Mary

Magda Kaiser, a Coptic Christian, is distraught over her missing daughter, Mary.

“She was our only daughter, so we spoiled her,” she explained. “She got whatever she wanted, but she was very shy.”

“We were close friends,” Kaiser continued. “She  never went anywhere without me. She always asked me to go with her  because she was afraid of being alone, by herself.”

Mary, an exceptional student, won mathematical  achievement awards. At the age of 19, she entered university to study  pharmacology. That’s where she befriended a Muslim classmate.

One night when the two women went out together for pizza and a movie, Mary suddenly fell ill. Friends last saw her entering a taxi.

“We knew she was missing because she didn’t come  home that night,” Kaiser said. “We believe her Muslim friend put drugs  in her food and hired people who abduct young Christian girls to kidnap  her.”

A day later, police informed Mary’s family they had  located her not far from Cairo, in the town of Kerdasa. They said Mary  had converted to Islam and had married a Muslim vendor.

Foul Play?

Magda and her husband suspected foul play. They  believed their daughter had become a victim of a vast, Islamic human  trafficking network – one targeting young Christian women.

“All this was coordinated between the government, police, the Wahhabis, Salafis. Everyone was in on it,” Kaiser said.

Officials summoned Mary to the police station where her father waited to see her.

“Four veiled ladies and four bearded men walked in  to the police station, accompanied by two policemen with machine guns,”  Kaiser recalled.

“As they walked by, my husband screamed out our  daughter’s name, ‘Mary!’ As Mary turned around to acknowledge him, one  of the bearded men pushed her away and punched her in the face,” she  said.

Overcome by rage, Mary’s father demanded to talk to his daughter. The police refused and ordered him to leave.

They said they closed the case because Mary was now a Muslim.

The Kaiser home used to be one of much joy,  laughter, and happiness. But five years after Mary’s disappearance, her  bed remains empty.

The emotional hurt still lingers. Her family said  that she was a devout Christian – there’s no way she would have  willingly embraced Islam.

A Common Occurrence Abduction cases like Mary’s are now common place in Egypt.

A new study found the number of disappearances and  abduction of Egyptian Christian girls is increasing. Kidnappings of  underage females and mothers of young children are also on the rise.

George Washington University professor Michele Clark is one of the authors of the study. She testified recently before the  Helsinki Commission, debunking arguments that suggest Christian girls  are leaving their faith and families simply for romance.

“They say yes to friendship, romance, to hope, a  future, safety and security. Nevertheless, (they) did not consent to  being ripped from their family without ever being able to see them  again,” she said.

Nor, she added, did these Christian women consent to being forcibly converted to a religion other than their own, or consent to a life of captivity.

Expert: US Must Intervene

So, what should be done? Middle East analyst Walid  Phares said the Obama administration must openly discuss the matter with Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi.

“The perpetrators in Egypt must know from the media, from public discussion, that our officials are demanding from the  president of Egypt and demanding from the future, or current parliament, that these issues be at the table, that the constitutional committee  that is looking at the future constitution take in consideration these  elements,” Phares told CBN News.

Clark also said the Egyptian government needs to create a national registry documenting the disappearance of minors.

“The Egyptian government will request an annual  accounting of all cases of disappearances, including open and ongoing  cases as well as prosecutions that resulted from these investigations,”  she said.

Meanwhile, Egyptian leaders are still debating the  possibility of imposing a strict interpretation of shariah on the  society, law that tolerates forced conversion and forced marriage for  non-Muslim women.

As for Magda Kaiser, she said she will not give up searching for her daughter.

“She will still be my daughter no matter what  happens to her,” Kaiser said. “I will keep trying to get her back. I  believe in God’s promises and I trust the Lord will never forsake us.”

“And I ask everybody to pray for us,” she continued. “I am confident the day will come when I will see her or meet her again.”


http://atlasshrugs2000.typepad.com/atlas_shrugs/2012/10/muslim-trafficking-networks-target-coptic-christian-women.html


http://theshariahwaronwomen.org/

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Comments

  • muse1876  On October 13, 2012 at 4:29 pm

    Obama won’t help her or anyother Christian. Obama will be silent because all MB are his friend.

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