By Patrick
Lee
The Malaysian Consultative Council of Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Sikhism and Taoism hits out at JAIS for disrupting a thanksgiving function.
The Malaysian Consultative Council of Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Sikhism and Taoism hits out at JAIS for disrupting a thanksgiving function.
PETALING JAYA: Malaysian
authorities appear to have little respect for places of worship, an interfaith
council said.
Reverend
Thomas Philips, head of the Malaysian Consultative Council of Buddhism,
Christianity, Hinduism, Sikhism and Taoism (MCCBCHST), who said this, condemned
a raid on a church last night.
“It is a
total disregard for respect. Whoever initiated the raid should have known
better. You can’t just simply go inside a church and create problems,” he said.
More than
30 police and Selangor Islamic Department (JAIS) officers, several in
plainclothes, raided the Damansara Utama Methodist Church (DUMC) in Section 13.
Harapan
Komuniti, an NGO, was hosting an annual thanksgiving dinner for about 100
people, including 15 Malays at the Dream Centre building which houses the
church.
Acting
without a warrant, the government officials gate-crashed the event at around
10pm, seizing programme sheets and questioning dinner guests.
Philips
said that any sort of raid or investigation into a house of worship needed to
be coordinated alongside local religious leaders.
“What if
they (the authorities) interrupted a wedding (ceremony) or another religious
activity?” he asked, adding that such an act would certainly result in a public
backlash.
He added
that the least government officials could have done was to get clearance before
conducting the raid.
Undue harassment
In a statement, DUMC senior pastor Daniel Ho said that the church was “highly disappointed” with the authorities, who entered without a warrant.
Undue harassment
In a statement, DUMC senior pastor Daniel Ho said that the church was “highly disappointed” with the authorities, who entered without a warrant.
“They have
subjected all the guests at the thanksgiving dinner to undue harassment.”
Both JAIS
and the police, he added, upon entering the church premises, started to take
videos and photographs.
“When asked
why they were there, JAIS officers replied that they received a complaint, the
nature of which they could not disclose, neither could provide a copy of the
complaint,” said Ho.
He said the
officers proceeded to take down the details of the Muslims present before
leaving the premises.
He also
revealed that Harapan Komuniti was hosting a “celebratory gathering” of people
involved with the NGO’s activities.
He said
that the gathering was to celebrate the NGO’s work in various community
projects, involving HIV/AIDS and natural disasters.
Meanwhile,
MCA vice-president Senator Gan Ping Sieu demanded an explanation and apology
from the Pakatan Rakyat-led Selangor government over the JAIS raid.
“For state
enforcement officials to disrupt a dinner held to promote unity, question the
multi-racial participants and seize the programme booklet, is an outrageous
conduct and is against pluralism practices and the concept of unity,” he said
in a statement.
Gan said it
was all the more shameful as it took place during the holy month of Ramadan.
“All along,
the Pakatan Rakyat has made a mockery of Barisan Nasional’s 1Malaysia concept
but last night’s raid again brought to the fore the coalition’s
narrow-mindedness and parochial inclinations,” he said.
He
questioned why Menteri Besar Khalid Ibrahim and Selangor executive councillor
Teresa Kok, who is a Christian, have remained silent.
Gan said
the latest incident only showed that Pakatan has allowed extremism to creep
into its administration, citing the examples of opposition against the MTV
concert, the proposal to ban sale of beer, and a recent plan to close
entertainment outlets in Kedah during Ramadan.
Source : FMT
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