The Phnom Penh Post

Myanmar monk banned for Islamophob­ic speech

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A MYANMAR monk infamous for his bilious anti-Muslim tirades has been banned from giving sermons for a year by the country’s top Buddhist body, an unpreceden­ted slapdown to a man whose hate speech has galvanised religious tensions.

Wirathu, a monk once dubbed the “face of Buddhist terror”, has led calls for restrictio­ns on Myanmar’s Muslim population, penning hyperbolic speeches warning of an Islamic takeover of the overwhelmi­ngly Buddhist country.

Myanmar i s gripped by deepening religious tensions that have repeatedly spilled into violence.

The unrest has been partially attributed to anti-Muslim rhetoric spread by Wirathu’s radical wing of Buddhist monks.

Aung San Suu Kyi’s government is under strong internatio­nal pressure to explain a bloody crackdown on the Muslim Rohingya minority in Rakhine state over recent months.

The February assassinat­ion of Ko Ni, a respected and highprofil­e Muslim lawyer and longtime Suu Kyi ally, also heightened tensions.

Wirathu, who draws large crowds to his stock-in-trade Islamophob­ic speeches or social media posts, had already been barred from speaking at an event shortly after Ko Ni’s murder. But a special meeting of the country’s most senior monks – the State Sangha Maha Nayaka – on Friday decided to ban all of his sermons.

“As he has repeatedly delivered hate speech against religions to cause communal strife and hinder efforts to uphold the rule of law” the monk “was banned from delivering sermons across Myanmar for one year from March 10, 2017 to March 9, 2018”, the council said in a statement that emerged on Saturday.

He will face “action under the rule of law” for any breach of the order, the Sangha added, without specifying what the punishment would be.

Aung San Win, the director of the Ministry of Religion, confirmed the order, but did not elaborate on the actions that may be taken against him or say whether the order covered his vigorous social media profile.

Muslims make up about 5 percent of Myanmar’s population.

Religious riots have roiled the country in recent years, killing scores of people – the majority of them Muslims.

The worst violence has been in Rakhine state where tens of thousands of Rohingya fled a military crackdown after deadly raids on police border posts.

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