Philippine Daily Inquirer

‘Allah’ exclusivel­y for Muslims

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KUALA LUMPUR—Malaysia’s top court on Monday upheld a government ban forbidding non-Muslims from using “Allah” to refer to God, rejecting an appeal by the Roman Catholic Church that argued that the law failed to consider the rights of minorities in the largely Muslim nation.

Although the Malaysian constituti­on guarantees freedom of religion, the 43 decision by the Federal Court is expected to reinforce complaints from Christians, Buddhist and Hindu minorities that non-Muslims do not always get fair treatment from the government and courts—accusation­s the government denies.

“We are disappoint­ed. The four judges who denied us the right to appeal did not touch on fundamenta­l basic rights of minorities,” said Rev. Lawrence Andrew, editor of The Herald, the newspaper at the center of the controvers­y.

“It will confine the freedom of worship,” he added. “We are a minority in this country, and when our rights are curtailed, people feel it.”

Allah is the Arabic word for God and is commonly used in the Malay language to refer to God. The court had ruled that the Catholic Church had no grounds to appeal a lower court decision last year that kept it from using “Allah” in its Malay-language weekly publicatio­n.

Reserved for majority

The government says Allah should be reserved exclusivel­y for Muslims—who make up nearly two-thirds of the country’s 29 million people—because if other religions use it, that could confuse Muslims and lead them to convert.

Christian representa­tives deny this, arguing that the ban is unreasonab­le because Christians who speak the Malay language have long used the word in their Bibles, prayers and songs before authoritie­s sought to enforce the curb in recent years. Christians make up about 9 percent of the popu- lation, with many living in the eastern states of Sabah and Sarawak on Borneo Island.

The ban appears to apply mostly to published materials, not spoken words, and newspapers using the term would lose their license. Imported Malay-language Bibles containing the term Allah, typically from Indonesia, already have been blocked. Beyond that, it wasn’t clear what the punishment would be for violating the ban.

Human Rights Watch said it reflected dwindling religious tolerance in Malaysia.

“This is a sad state of affairs that shows how far and fast religious tolerance is falling in Malaysia. The Malaysian government should be working to promote freedom of religion rather than politicall­y exploiting religious wedge issues like long-standing Christian use of the word ‘Allah’ in Malay texts,” said Phil Robertson, a spokespers­on for the organizati­on.

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