Courtroom Terror (GateStone Institute) by Raymond Ibrahim 04/05/12)
Source: http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/2993/courtroom-terror
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Muslim lawyers representing the plaintiffs prevented the defense team
from entering the court. "They said no Muslim will defend a
Christian. The Muslims decided later that even Christians would not
defend him."
Apologists sometimes try to explain away Islamic terrorism as a
byproduct of something else, calling it the "weapon of the weak." The
usual argument is that because Muslims are politically, socially, or
militarily weak—the archetypal example often given is Israel vis-à-
vis the Palestinians—they have no choice but to resort to terror to
strike at their stronger adversaries; they resort to terrorism simply
to even the odds.
Although this narrative is widely accepted, it is false. Consider the
following account that took place a couple of weeks ago in Muslim-
majority Egypt:
More than 300 Muslim lawyers inside and outside a courthouse in the
southern Egyptian province of Assuit today [3/16] prevented defense
lawyer Ahmad Sayed Gabali, who is representing the Christian Makarem
Diab, from going into court. Mr. Diab was found guilty of "Insulting
the Muslim Prophet" and was scheduled today for a hearing on his
appeal. Attorney Dr. Naguib Gabriell, head of the Egyptian Union of
Human Rights Organization, said there was "terror in the Assiut Court
today." He added that he was on his way to court when he was advised
that Muslim lawyers have issued death threats to any Christian
lawyers who attend the court session. "Makram Diab was assaulted by
Muslim lawyers during his transfer from the courtroom and security
failed to protect him." Peter Sarwat, a Coptic lawyer, said that
Muslim lawyers representing the plaintiffs prevented the defense team
from entering court. "They said no Muslim will defend a Christian. It
was agreed that Christian lawyers would take over and two Coptic
lawyers volunteered, but the Muslims decided later that even
Christians would not defend him." Sarwat said the Muslim lawyers
wanted to assault the chief judge but he managed to leave the court
via a rear door [emphasis added].
The report goes on to explain how Muslim lawyers and activists went
to court to defend Diab´s right to a fair trial only to be assaulted
by other Muslim lawyers: "They were assaulting us in a beastly and
strange way just because we went there to defend a citizen who
happened to be a Christian," said one of the lawyers, adding that
exiting the court required security intervention: "We left court in a
security vehicle which took us to Security headquarters; otherwise we
don´t know what the outcome would have been for us."
More details include eyewitnesses reporting that the Muslim lawyers
were "armed with clubs." Several, including reporters, were injured
in the ensuing melee, and human rights groups were "forced out of the
courtroom by the Muslims."
According to Dictionary.com, the primary definition of terrorism
is "the use of violence and threats to intimidate or coerce,
especially for political purposes." In other words, terrorism is not
just limited to 9/11-like strikes, but entails intimidating,
bullying, threatening, and so on—precisely what happened at this
courthouse trial.
Some more points to keep in mind:
Those making the death threats, physically assaulting others with
clubs, and otherwise engaging in terrorist behavior were "more than
300 Muslim lawyers"; not jihadis or fugitives hiding out in caves,
but lawyers.
The entire issue revolves around something that, by Western standards
of freedom, would be a non-issue to start with: insulting a "holy"
figure, Islam´s Prophet Muhammad. In a Western court of law, the
Christian "blasphemer" would not even be tried, but rather the
terrorist "lawyers."
The attacks on fellow Muslim lawyers, who merely sought to represent
the condemned Christian, is in keeping with Islam´s doctrines of
loyalty and disloyalty, which command Muslims always to side with
fellow Muslims, while having enmity for non-Muslim infidels—certainly
those perceived to have insulted the Prophet.
The lesson that emerges from this shameful miscarriage of justice
is . . . predictability. Anyone familiar with the Islamic world—its
history, its doctrines—cannot be surprised at any of the above: rage
and violence in response to a non-Muslim insulting the prophet; rage
and violence toward Muslim members of a legal system because they
sided with this "infidel", who is guilty before he is even charged
with a crime, simply because he is not a Muslim—these are quite
standard, with ample precedent, regardless of whether the enraged
Muslims are suit-and-tie wearing lawyers, or kalashnikov-toting
jihadis.
Contrary to popular belief, as this episode clearly shows, "Islamic
terrorism" is not a product of "weakness," but rather the typical
response to those who transgress the bounds of Sharia. Whether one
man "blaspheming" Muhammad in a Muslim-majority nation as in this
example, or whether an entire nation existing on land perceived to
belong to Islam as in Israel)—for those transgressing the bounds of
Sharia, terrorism is never far behind.
Raymond Ibrahim is a Shillman Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom
Center and an Associate Fellow at the Middle East Forum.
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