Egypt: Bahais can't be recognized on official IDs

An Egyptian court ruled Saturday against giving Bahais the right to include their faith on official identification documents, ending an almost nine-month court battle. "The Egyptian constitution recognizes only three religions: Islam, Christianity and Judaism," the judge of the Supreme Administrative Court said in his verdict. Bahaism is a religion that emerged from Islam and regards a 19th century Persian nobleman, Baha'u'llah, as its prophet, a challenge to the Muslim belief that Muhammad is the last prophet. The ruling is expected to spark a new round of public debate between Islamists, on one side and rights' advocates who describe the ruling as a violation of human rights, on the other.