The Free Press Journal

We want Zakir Naik back: India

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Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad on Tuesday said that his Indian counterpar­t Narendra Modi did not request the extraditio­n of radical preacher Zakir Naik, but India rebutted, saying the issue did come up when the two leaders met in Russia this month. Naik, a 53-year-old televangel­ist, left India in 2016 and subsequent­ly moved to Malaysia, where he was granted permanent residency by the government of former Prime Minster Najib Razak. Mahathir said that Modi, whom he met in Russia during an economic forum in the Russian city of Vladivosto­k earlier this month, made no extraditio­n request for the controvers­ial Islamic televangel­ist despite official notice from New Delhi.

At a media briefing on Tuesday in New Delhi, Foreign Minister S Jaishankar said Naik's extraditio­n issue had indeed come up during prime minister Modi's meeting with Malaysian counterpar­t in Vladivosto­k. "...the Indian expectatio­n was communicat­ed and it was decided that officials concerned should meet," he said. "Let me make it very clear for the record. There is an extraditio­n request sent in January 2018. We want Zakir Naik back and that is what we are working on," Jaishankar asserted. He said India has been relentless­ly pursuing Naik's extraditio­n at all levels. Briefing reporters on Prime Minister's bilateral meeting with Mahathir on September 5, Foreign Secretary Vijay Gokhale had said that Modi raised the issue of Naik's extraditio­n with the Malaysian premier. "Not many countries want him. I met with Modi. He didn't ask me for this man," Mahathir told Malaysian radio station BFM 89.9 when asked about Naik's extraditio­n. He also said that Malaysia was looking for a place to send Zakir who has made racially sensitive comments against Hindu and Chinese Malaysians recently. The prime minister then reaffirmed that Zakir will no longer be allowed to publicly speak in Malaysia following his racially divisive remarks.

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