Forum on Minority Issues
Sixth Session (2013)
Item 4: Promotionectio...the identity of religious minorities
Statement delivered by the Delegation of the Arab Republic of Egypt
Mme Chairperson,
Egypt has been synonymous with religious freedom and Peaceful co-existence
for centuries and even millennia. Since the seventh century, Muslims and Christians
have formed one social fabric. This deeply-rooted reality remains the case today,
whatever the challenges may be. In fact all communities in the society became an
integral part, and none of them, in past or present times, including Christian Copts,
considered or consider themselves as "minorities", a concept, which in itself, is alien
to the Egyptian society.
We would like to reiterate that clear evidences in the current rules of the
International Human Rights Law, and the available jurisprudence and practice,
suggest that the concept of "minority" is not of relevance to the status of Christian
Copts in Egypt. Article 27 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
(ICCPR), in which Egypt is a party to since 1982, necessitates the existence of a
minority in the first instance for exercising the right contained therein. Also, the
Human Rights Committee requirement of objective criteria for determining the
existence of a minority, apart from size or numerical considerations, are most
relevant to Egypt's experience. This is especially reflected in the fact that all
Egyptian Constitutions, across the time, while guaranteeing religious freedoms and
prohibiting discrimination on any grounds, including on the basis of religion or
ethnicity or language, as well as providing for positive obligations on the State to
that end, does not regard any community in society as a minority. Moreover, in
applying the vital notion or principle of self-identification, we find that Egyptian
society is not based on groups, as no community, collectively or through their
representatives, including Christian Copts, proclaimed or sought the status of
"minority", or considered itself as such.
That is not to say that no problems exist at all, but the Government is totally