Egypt el-Sissi inaugurates cathedral\, mosque in new capital

Egypt el-Sissi inaugurates cathedral, mosque in new capital

AP  |  Cairo 

Egypt's on Sunday inaugurated a new cathedral for the and one of the region's largest mosques in a highly symbolic gesture at a time when Islamic militants are increasingly targeting the country's minority Christians.

Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, a general-turned-president, has made sectarian harmony a cornerstone of his rule, fighting Islamic militancy while advocating equality between the overwhelming Muslim majority and Christians, who account for 10 percent of Egypt's 100 million people.

However, el-Sissi's widely publicized policy to staunch sectarianism has done little to protect Christians in rural Egypt, where Muslim extremists frequently attack their homes and businesses or force them to leave their homes after violent disputes.

Critics and activists say discrimination against Christians there is often tolerated by local authorities and branches of the security agencies.

But Sunday's opening ceremony in Egypt's New Administrative Capital, el-Sissi's brainchild that is located in the desert east of Cairo, stressed what the like to call "the national fabric" of Christians and Muslims.

Entertainers and chorus lines took to the stage to sing about the two faiths live peacefully side by side. Short films on the same topic were also screened.

The ceremony's presenters portrayed the construction of the cathedral and the mosque, which took 18 months to complete, as a message to humanity. "It is a message to the whole world that is a nation for all," said one presenter.

The ceremony, attended by Palestinian leader and a host of Arab dignitaries, included recorded video messages of support from the region's top Christian clerics as well as Pope

Speaking in Italian, Pope said: "With joy I greet all of you on the joyful occasion of the dedication of the new Cathedral of the Nativity, built in the May the of peace give to Egypt, the and the whole world the gift of peace and prosperity."

The inauguration ceremony ended with a display of fireworks, taking on added significance because it fell on Eve for Egypt's predominantly Coptic Orthodox Christians, and just hours after a police bomb squad was killed trying to defuse an near a church.

El-Sissi and participants observed a minute of silence in memory of the fallen

The late Saturday blast came a little more than a week after a roadside bomb hit a tourist bus near the Giza Pyramids, killing three Vietnamese tourists and their Egyptian

It likely will compel authorities to further tighten security around churches ahead of the Coptic Orthodox Already, armed policemen guard churches and security guards check the identity of visitors. have also been set up outside churches.

The heightened security followed a spate of attacks claimed by the Islamic State group which has targeted churches and buses carrying pilgrims to remote desert monasteries, killing more than 100 Christians over the past two years.

The Coptic mass is expected to be held at the new cathedral and attended by el-Sissi.

has been battling Islamic militants for years, with the and police now engaged since early last year in an all-out campaign to eradicate them, throwing into battle tens of thousands of troops backed by armour, fighter jets, helicopter gunships and warships.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, January 07 2019. 00:31 IST