Malaysia Allah dispute: Top court rejects challenge
BBC | 23 June 2014
Malaysia's
highest court has rejected a challenge to the ban on Christians using
the word "Allah" to refer to God, in a highly divisive legal case in the
Muslim-majority nation. [Silly, silly, very silly ruling! And DANGEROUS!]
The case was brought by the Catholic Church, which sought to overturn a ban first put in place in 2007.
But the Federal Court said an earlier ruling backing the ban was correct.
The case began over the use of "Allah" to refer to the Christian God in the Catholic Church's Malay-language paper.
People of all faiths use the word Allah in Malay to refer to their deities.
Christians argue they have used the word, which entered Malay
from Arabic, to refer to their God for centuries and that the ruling
violates their rights.
Malaysian authorities say its use by Christians could confuse Muslims and lead some to convert to Christianity.
Malay Muslims make up almost two-thirds of the country's population, but there are large Hindu and Christian communities.
The long-running case has proved very controversial, sparking
impassioned debate and leading to occasional attacks on mosques and
churches.
The Catholic Church's newspaper, The Herald, appealed against
the initial ban and in 2009 a court ruled in its favour, but that
judgement that was later overturned by the Court of Appeal.
This ruling was handed down by a seven-member panel, which voted by 4-3 to dismiss the challenge.
Herald editor Father Lawrence Andrew said he was "greatly
disappointed" by the judgement which "didn't touch on the fundamental
rights of minorities".
Muslim activists outside the court welcomed the decision, however.
S Selvarajah, one of the lawyers for the Church, said the
ruling marked the end of legal proceedings. "It's a blanket ban.
Non-Muslims cannot use the word," he told AFP news agency.
But reports in Malaysian newspapers suggested the Church could call for a review of the decision.
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