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Cairo, March 13,
2010: Thirty people were injured when clashes
broke out between Christians and Muslims in a rural area
in northern Egypt, media reports said.
Fighting erupted late Friday in the north-western
governorate of Mersa Matrouh over a fence Muslims said
had been built to take over a piece of land to build a
church, the BBC reported.
The al-Bashayer news website said 18 of the injured were
Coptic Christians. Police cordoned the area after
arresting suspects, and angry people from both sides
were throwing stones at cars and nearby shops, it said.
Clashes between Egypt's Christian and Muslim populations
are rare, but tensions do periodically erupt over
disputes about women's issues or the construction of
houses of worship.
The Mersa Matrouh unrest was the first time such clashes
had erupted in northern Egypt. Fighting previously had
taken place in southern Egypt, where a large number of
Christians live.
In the worst sectarian attack in years, eight Christians
and one Muslim police officer were shot to death Jan 6
when gunmen opened fire on Christians leaving a Coptic
Christmas Eve Mass in the town of Nagaa Hamadi, 650
kilometres south of Cairo.
According to government figures, Christians account for
roughly 10 percent of Egypt's population, but many
Egyptian Christians said they believe the real figure is
higher.
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