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Both Muslims and non-Muslims face
discrimination from Malaysian authorities in the practice and propagation of
their beliefs, according to a UK-based study.
The study, conducted by
international human rights organisation Equal Rights Trust (ERT) and local
rights group Tenaganita, found that Muslims who express beliefs not approved by
“official interpreters of Islam” face discrimination from the state and federal
government due to provisions in the constitution.
“In the Malaysian context, the
belief that only the religiously learned (the ulama) are entitled to opine on
religious matters in Islam has created a culture of taboos at the expense of
the right to freedom of religion without discrimination,” said a report from
the study.
“Today, those Muslims who do not
follow the officially sanctioned religion can face persecution.
“As Sunni Islam is the officially
accepted branch of Islam in Malaysia, any other forms, practices or schools of
Islamic thoughts are vulnerable to being classified deviant.”
The government maintains an official
list of 56 sects of Islam it considers deviant and a threat to national
security. The list includes Shi’a Islam.
“The government, upon approval by a
Syariah court, may detain Muslims who deviate from accepted Sunni principles
and subject them to mandatory ‘rehabilitation’ in centres that teach and
enforce government approved Islamic practices,” said the report.
In the case of non-Muslims, it said,
Article 11 (4) of the Federal Constitution had been used to place
discriminatory restrictions on the religious freedoms of Christians, including
the freedom to propagate their beliefs.
Article 11(4) states that “state law
and, in respect of the Federal Territories of Kuala Lumpur and Labuan, federal
law may control or restrict the propagation of religious doctrine or belief
among persons professing the religion of Islam.”
This article was used against
Christians to ostensibly prevent them from proselytising to Muslims and
threatening the supremacy of Islam in Malaysia, the report said.
Arrests
“Laws prohibiting the proselytisation by non-Muslims were reportedly used by the Selangor Islamic Religious Department to suppress the activities of the Damansara Utama Methodist Church,” it said.
“Laws prohibiting the proselytisation by non-Muslims were reportedly used by the Selangor Islamic Religious Department to suppress the activities of the Damansara Utama Methodist Church,” it said.
“In 2009, nine Christians were
arrested by Malaysian police at Universiti Putra Malaysia … for allegedly
trying to convert Muslims to Christianity.”
Article 11 (4) is also the basis
upon which state laws have prohibited the use of words and phrases by
non-Muslims, the report revealed.
“The Malaysian government has banned
the use of the word ‘Allah’ by other religions, on the basis that Muslims would
be confused by the use of ‘Allah’ in other religious publications.”
This led to the 2009 seizure of
35,000 copies of the Malaysian-language Bible, which the government finally
released two years later on condition that each copy was stamped with the
phrase “Not for Muslims”.
Non-Muslims continue to be
prohibited from using the word “Allah” pending an appeal made by the government
over the High Court’s decision in 2009, which granted a Catholic organisation
the use of the word when referring to God in its newspaper.
In February this year, a concert by
Grammy-award winning US singer Erykah Badu was cancelled because a publicity
photograph showed her with a tattoo with the word “Allah” in Arabic.
Non-Islamic religions also face
obstacles in establishing and maintaining places of worship, the report said,
citing the destruction in 2006 of several Hindu temples, some of them almost
two centuries old.
“In 2007, authorities demolished the
100 year old Maha Mariamman Hindu Temple in Padang Jawa, Selangor, and reportedly
assaulted its chief priest.
Thanks FREE MALAYSIA TODAY
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