Malaysia's Islamic authorities seize Bibles as Allah row  deepens
 
By Niluksi Koswanage 
KUALA LUMPUR Thu Jan 2, 2014 


 
(Reuters) - Islamic authorities in Malaysia on Thursday seized 321 Bibles  
from a Christian group because they used the word Allah to refer to God,  
signalling growing intolerance that may inflame ethnic and religious tension 
in  the Southeast Asian country.  
The raid comes after a Malaysian court in October ruled that the Arabic 
word  was exclusive to Muslims, most of whom are ethnic Malays, the largest 
ethnic  group in the country alongside sizeable Christian, Hindu and Buddhist  
minorities.
 
 
That ruling overturned a court decision that allowed a Roman Catholic  
newspaper printed in Malay, the country's national language, to use  Allah. 
The change has heightened concern that religious authorities, which issue  
rulings for Muslims and operate alongside civil courts, now have more legal  
muscle. 
Analysts say new rulings that affect non-Muslims could be a way of 
deflecting  anger against Prime Minister Najib Razak's government from poor 
Malay 
Muslims  over subsidy cuts likely to force up electricity, petrol and sugar  
prices. 
On Thursday, the top Islamic authority in the richest and most populous 
state  of Selangor seized the Malay-language Bibles from the Bible Society. The 
society  said authority officials escorted two of its officials to a police 
station to  make statements after which they were released on bail. 
"We were told that we were under investigation for breaking a Selangor 
state  law banning non-Muslims from using the word Allah," said Bible Society 
of 
 Malaysia Chairman Lee Min Choon. 
The raid is a marked escalation from the occasional seizure at border  
checkpoints of Bibles imported from _Indonesia_ 
(http://uk.reuters.com/places/indonesia?lc=int_mb_1001) . It was the first time 
Islamic authorities  have 
entered premises belonging to a Christian organisation to carry out a  raid. 
Christians from Malaysia's rural states of Sabah and Sarawak in Borneo, who 
 have used the word Allah for centuries, have moved in droves to Selangor 
and  other parts of peninsular Malaysia in recent years to look for work. 
BAD ELEMENTS 
The main political party within Najib's ruling coalition, the United Malays 
 National Organisation (UMNO), said its Selangor members would protest at 
all  churches in the state on Sunday against unauthorised use of the word  
Allah. 
"There are laws in Selangor and there was a decree by his Royal Highness 
the  Sultan. So what they are doing is carrying out the Sultan's decree," 
Deputy  Prime Minister and UMNO Deputy President Muhyiddin Yassin was quoted by 
media as  saying. 
"They are not doing anything against the law." 
The Sultan of Selangor, one of nine sultans who serve in turn as titular  
Malaysian head of state, decreed last year that non-Muslims must refrain from 
 using Allah in Bibles. He asked Muslims to unite against "bad elements" 
that  misuse the word. 
The increasingly assertive stand by holders of the largely ceremonial 
office  show that Muslim leaders have become increasingly vocal about their 
role 
in  defending Islam. 
In 2010, arsonists firebombed several churches over the initial ruling that 
 allowed the Catholic newspaper to use the Arabic word. Two Malay men were 
found  guilty for setting fire to one of the churches.

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