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The candidate representing the Muslim Brotherhood, Mohammed Morsi, has won the Egyptian presidential election. The prospect of an Islamist government, however, has raised many questions for religious minorities including the country's significant Coptic Christians population. The Washington Post reports that Morsi's first statements have been unifying:
In a televised victory speech Sunday night, Morsi cast himself as a
leader for all Egyptians. He vowed to champion the rights of women and
minority Christians, and he voiced conciliatory notes toward the armed
forces. In what appeared to be an effort to demonstrate his
independence, the Brotherhood announced Sunday that Morsi had resigned
from the organization and its political party.
“I will serve all
Egypt. There will be no distinction between anybody,” a solemn Morsi
said, standing behind a lectern emblazoned with the state insignia.
“National unity is the only way to get Egypt out of this difficult
time.”
Actions will tell the story here, though, not speeches. A more skeptical take is in the Christian Post's report .
[M]any are skeptical of Egypt's future with the Brotherhood in the driving
seat. The group has made well-known its goal to develop an Islamic
state dictated by Shariah Law, and many believe Morsi will oversee a
slow ebbing away of religious freedoms in the nation. Kurt J. Werthmuller, a research fellow at the Hudson Institute's Center for Religious Freedom
has previously told The Christian Post, "A Morsi presidency would give
more license to the Muslim Brotherhood to institute conservative
Islamist policies in the country, and this would without a doubt make
life more restrictive and discriminatory toward the Coptic Christian
minority."
The good news is that the Egyptian people appear to have finally selected their own ruler through democratic elections. A true democracy, however, requires essential freedoms for all. None is more fundamental than the freedom to worship or not according to the dictates of conscience. This is the next great challenge for Egypt as they begin the process of drafting a constitution, a division of power, and a guarantee of rights.
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