No evidence of a Christian conspiracy to
"baptise" Malaysia and appoint a Christian prime minister, says Home
Ministry.
KUALA LUMPUR: The Home Ministry
(KDN) said today there are no evidence to back claims of attempts to turn
Malaysia into a Christian nation. The matter has been categorised as “no
further action”.
“Investigation
showed there are no sufficient evidence to support statements to convict any
individuals in this case,” said the Home Ministry in a written reply to
Zulkifli Noordin (Independent-Kulim).
“The investigation
paper had already been referred to the Attorney General’s Chambers and this
case have been (categorised) as NFA (no further action),” it added.
Pro-Umno
blog bigdog.com had first made the allegation that there was a Christian
conspiracy to “baptise” Malaysia and appoint a Christian prime minister.
The blogger
claimed the meeting, held in the DAP-held Penang, was organised by party leader
and Jelutong MP Jeff Ooi, who witnessed “oath-takings” by several church heads.
Umno-owned
Utusan Malaysia gave a front page and extensive coverage to the allegation.
Escalating tension
The Utusan report soured the already fragile Muslim-Christian relation in the country, prompting Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak to make amends with church leaders.
The Utusan report soured the already fragile Muslim-Christian relation in the country, prompting Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak to make amends with church leaders.
This
included establishing ties with the Vatican Church in an unprecedented move
that saw Najib vowing to repair relations between Malaysian Muslims and
Christians. He also pledged assurance that the Christians would be allowed to
practice their religion freely.
But the move
had failed to calm hostility between the two following the raid on a church by
the Selangor Islamic Religious Department (Jais) on grounds of proselytisation
attempts by Christians.
Church
leaders have denied the allegation of conversion attempts but the country’s
conservative Muslims insist proselytising efforts have been carried out.
This has
also led to several rightwing and Islamic hardline NGOs organising a gathering
of a million Muslims this Saturday to rally against the “challenge of
Christianisation”.
Source : FMT
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