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Malaysian govt rejects Islamic state plan
Kuala Lumpur, Nov 13: A plan to turn Muslim-dominated but secular Malaysia into an Islamic state was condemned today by both the government and opposition allies of the fundamentalist party that put it forward.
Kuala Lumpur, Nov 13: A plan to turn
Muslim-dominated but secular Malaysia into an Islamic state
was condemned today by both the government and opposition
allies of the fundamentalist party that put it forward.
Government ministers said the Pan-Malaysian Islamic
Party's plan, which includes strict Islamic laws that would
punish criminals with amputation and stoning, and a ban on
non-Muslims being prime minister, was a political stunt that
would drive away foreign investors.
The Islamic party's coalition partner distanced itself from the plan, warning it would sow division among Malaysia's ethnic groups, and hand ammunition to the government in the lead up to elections expected early next year.
Abdul Hadi Awang, the leader of the Islamic party known as PAS, launched the long-awaited plan yesterday, saying it was a guide to "how our society can be redeemed and reconstructed." He promised Malaysia's multicultural, multiethnic society would be preserved, but the constitution would be amended to place Islam at the center of government.
Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi's United Malays National Organization is PAS's main rival for Malay Muslim votes, but relies on support from parties based in Malaysia's large ethnic Chinese and Indian communities to form the ruling coalition.
Bureau Report
The Islamic party's coalition partner distanced itself from the plan, warning it would sow division among Malaysia's ethnic groups, and hand ammunition to the government in the lead up to elections expected early next year.
Abdul Hadi Awang, the leader of the Islamic party known as PAS, launched the long-awaited plan yesterday, saying it was a guide to "how our society can be redeemed and reconstructed." He promised Malaysia's multicultural, multiethnic society would be preserved, but the constitution would be amended to place Islam at the center of government.
Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi's United Malays National Organization is PAS's main rival for Malay Muslim votes, but relies on support from parties based in Malaysia's large ethnic Chinese and Indian communities to form the ruling coalition.
Bureau Report