Global Times

Former monk in Egypt held on charges of killing bishop

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Egypt’s public prosecutor has detained a disgraced monk on charges of killing a bishop at a desert monastery, his lawyer said on Saturday, in a case that has rocked the Coptic community, the Middle East’s biggest Christian minority.

The killing last month of Bishop Epiphanius, a 64-yearold scholar who had led the Abu Makar Monastery in Wadi Natroun, an area some 110 kilometers northwest of Cairo, prompted the church to impose strict new measures on its clergy.

Lawyer Ameer Naseef told Reuters that an Alexandria prosecutor on Friday charged Wael Saad, a monk who was known as Isaiah al-Makari before he was stripped of his religious title, with the July 29 killing.

Officials from the prosecutor’s office were not immediatel­y available, but judicial sources confirmed the report.

“The prosecutio­n’s decision came yesterday, on Friday, and it (the prosecutio­n) asked that his remand be renewed on time,” Naseef told Reuters, adding that this would be done on Sunday. Naseef also said that he had decided to withdraw from the case, but he gave no reason.

Christians in Egypt make up an estimated 10 percent of its roughly 96 million population.

The church had earlier said that Saad had been investigat­ed over alleged long-standing violations of his duties as a monk, but denied that he had been suspected of involvemen­t in Bishop Epiphanius’ killing.

The case has prompted the head of the Coptic church, Pope Tawadros II, to launch sweeping measures to combat what some Christian figures have described as violations of the principles of poverty and chastity.

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