International
Christian Concern (ICC) has learned that since September 30, 2021, at
least 17 Egyptian Coptic Christians have gone missing in Libya. They
were living in an Egyptian neighborhood in Tripoli; it is unknown who
took them and why. Some friends and family believe they were detained by
the authorities, while others believe they were taken by an armed
group. Regardless, they hold a common fear that these individuals were
targeted because of their Christian faith and that they may face a
deadly fate reminiscent of the 2015 beheading of 21 Coptic Christians in
Libya by ISIS.
An Egyptian lawyer whose friend is missing shared, “Even
now there [is] no confirmed news. (My friend) Emad Nasr and the other
Copts traveled to Libya three months ago. They headed to the United Arab
Emirates and then to Libya, because there are no direct airlines to
Libya. The Copts had visas for Libya (labor visas), but they failed to
get work opportunities and the costs of renewing the visas are high. So
the police of Libya detained them from September 30 until now.”
“The
Copts were staying in the Gargash District in Tripoli. In this
residency, they were surrounded by so many persons of other countries
like India and Bangladesh. So the action of detaining 17 Copts only is
such a mysterious action! We are fearing of repeating an incident like
the one who did by ISIS. We are contacting the Egyptian Foreign Ministry
to intervene in the situation,” he continued.
The brother of one of the missing Copts said, “It
is unknown if they were detained by the Libyan authorities or were
kidnapped by unknown parties… they lived in the Gargash neighborhood, in
which dozens of Egyptians live. We learned from one of the residents
there that a number of Egyptians were kidnapped in this neighborhood
without knowing their fate."
According to local press, the
names of the missing are: Emad Nasr, Assem Abo Gobrial, George Nasser
Riad, Maris Malak Matias, Wael Samir Shawky, Hani Zaki Shaker Allah,
Haitham Nazeer Malak, Gerges Nazi Malak, Thabet Gad Hanna, Bakhit Malak
Matias, Adly Assad Ataya, Mikhaeil Nazir Malak, Roman Masoud Fahim,
Karim Abu al-Ghait, Emad Nasri Qaldi, Daniel Saber Lamei, and Ezekiel
Saber Lamei.
October 20 marked the 10-year anniversary of the
death of Libya’s former strongman, Moammar Gadhafi. A decade of
instability and violence has left Libya a country shattered by competing
armed groups, terrorists, militias, as well as competing governments.
Nevertheless,
before the rise of ISIS in 2014, Libya was a common destination for
Egypt’s Coptic Christian community. Egypt’s Christian community was
faced with a choice: experience marginalization that left Christians
deeply impoverished inside their home country or seek work opportunities
in Libya at great personal risk. The 2015 beheading of Coptic
Christians in Libya stopped many from traveling there for work. But
Egypt’s continued marginalization of Christians continues to force them
to consider alternatives, including high-risk countries such as Libya.
Claire Evans, ICC’s Regional Manager for the Middle East, said, “This
is a frightening time for Egyptian Christians, regardless of whether
their family or friends are among those missing. The memory of ISIS
marching Coptic Christians down a Libyan beach to their deaths runs
deep; it was an event that was traumatic for all of Egypt’s Christians,
an event that held serious implications for everyone. We urge the
relevant authorities to do everything possible to investigate the cause
of this latest disappearance, to bring these men home alive, and the
perpetrators to justice.”
Friday, October 22, 2021
Life Lesson: Do not move to Libya
For interviews, please contact: press@persecution.org.
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