To: Victor Lazlo who wrote (4172 ) 9/12/2001 11:31:14 PM From: Douglas V. Fant Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 206099 Victor, We'll need to review that policy as well as tighten up and enforce our foreign visitor visa policies much more rigorously like Europe. Also see attached article about fundamental Islamist attacks on Egyptian Christians in Egypt. Understand that the problem with fundamental Islam is worldwide with all civilized peoples and not just in the US.... By the way has anyone heard Lou Farrakahn deplore the attacks in New York- Or is that US $1,000,000,000 contract that Mohamar Gahddafy of Libya awarded to Farrakahn 14 months ago uh, uh clouding Farrakhan's patriotism, heh-heh? From January 2000 BBC Website: The victims of clashes between Christians and Muslims in southern Egypt are due to be buried on Tuesday. The violence broke out after a dispute in a shop on Friday. At least 20 people, mainly Christians, died in the violence, and 44 were injured according to the interior ministry. A team of investigators is reported to have been sent to the area. More than 20 buildings and several vehicles had been torched, it said. The fighting began in the village of Kusheh, about 440km (275 miles) south of Cairo. Coptic Bishop Wissa, from the neighbouring village of Balyana, told the BBC that the looting and burning of Christian homes and shops had spread to four other villages by Monday. Kusheh has been sealed off, and the authorities say the situation is now "calm and under control". Curfews have been imposed in the area, and the Egyptian authorities have ordered an investigation. Financial dispute BBC Cairo correspondent Caroline Hawley says the fighting represents the most serious outbreak of communal violence in the area for several months. It broke out during a financial dispute between Muslim and Coptic Christian businessmen in Kusheh. A Muslim customer had allegedly demanded an apology from a Christian shopowner, which was refused. The customer is then reported to have opened fire, hitting and wounding three farmers passing by. The violence then spread to neighbouring villages. The Bishop said "barbaric people carrying rifles went on a rampage and started firing at Christian shops and Christian houses" after church services on Sunday. Christian businesses targeted Witnesses in the village said scores of Christian-owned shops and offices had been destroyed in the violence. They said security forces had opened fire in an effort to disperse the protesters, some of whom had fired back. Some reports say that one of those killed was Rashed Fahim, a Christian fabric trader whose dispute with a Muslim villager over a business deal sparked the initial violence last Wednesday. The authorities imposed a curfew to bring the initial violence under control, but fighting flared up again when the curfew was eased at the weekend. History of tension Kusheh last came to international attention in 1998, when an Egyptian human rights group accused police of arresting hundreds of Christian villagers and torturing some of them during an investigation into the murder of two Christians. The group believes the police were trying to find a Christian, rather than Muslim, culprit to avoid inflaming tensions between the two communities. Relations between Egypt's Muslims and its Christian minority are extremely delicate.