Non-Muslims can gather too, say Umno MPs
October 20, 2011
KUALA
LUMPUR, Oct 20 — Umno lawmakers said that non-Muslims are free to
gather their believers, while dismissing fears that a planned rally of a
million Muslims against Christians “challenging the sovereignty of
Islam” this Saturday will heighten already tense inter-faith relations.
MPs from the ruling party told The Malaysian Insider today
that such rallies were an extension of a freedom of speech, despite
claims that the Himpunan Sejuta Umat (Himpun) or Gathering of a Million
Faithful, is a show of strength by various right-wing groups such as
Perkasa.
“NGOs from other religions can gather too. It is up to them to organise it,” Deputy Education Minister Datuk Puad Zarkashi (picture) said.
Kinabatangan MP Datuk Bung Mokhtar Radin agreed, saying that
“non-Muslims can gather as well, so long as it is not in the streets,”
referring to the July 9 Bersih street rally for free and fair elections
which was outlawed by the government.
Christian leaders have labelled Himpun’s fight against
proselytisation “irrelevant” and cautioned the group against provoking
religious tension by going ahead with the rally.
Umno’s partners in the ruling Barisan Nasional, MCA and Gerakan, have
also called on Himpun to cancel the rally as it will harm race and
religious relations.
PAS has said that the gathering should remain apolitical while PKR insists there is no threat from Christians.
“I support it. I think PAS and PKR Muslims should support it too if
they really want to defend the faith because it is non-partisan,” Puad,
who is Batu Pahat MP, added.
“Everyone can assemble. This is the start of liberalisation where we
can speak and understand each other better. The problem now is a lot of
us are ignorant about other faiths,” said Gua Musang MP Tengku Razalegh
Hamzah.
Himpun has called on Muslims to rally against Christians “challenging
the sovereignty of Islam” this Saturday on the back of alleged
proselytising by Christians.
A large crowd at the Shah Alam Stadium this weekend could push Umno
and PAS to seek relevance among more religious Malays and raise already
simmering fears of Islamisation among non-Muslims and more liberal
Malays.
But Bung insisted the event would not be a show of strength as “there
won’t be any speeches attacking other religions. It is just a gathering
to unite and strengthen Muslims.”
Umno information chief Datuk Ahmad Maslan also said the gathering will not disturb the peace as it is being held in a stadium.
“We are a tolerant country. As long as it is held in a safe place, it
won’t hurt race relations,” the deputy minister in the prime minister’s
department said.
I can't believe that someone of Ku Li's stature could make that kind of statement.
Are we going to speak and understand each other better if each faith - the Buddhists, Hindu, Sikhs, Christians etc - has their own assembly while Himpun has theirs?
How does it work?
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