Saudis say women in France exempted from veils

(Reuters) – Two Saudi clerics have declared Muslim women are exempt from wearing full veils in France, which is planning to ban them, but added they should avoid visiting it as tourists.

The comments, by Islamic jurisprudence scholar Mohamed al-Nujaimi and author and cleric Ayed al-Garni, come two weeks after French lawmakers passed a bill under which women could be fined for appearing in public with the all-covering burqa or the niqab, which leaves the eyes exposed.

“For a woman who permanently resides in France or is a French citizen, if there is harm in wearing the veil … it is permitted that she shows her face when need and necessity demand it,” Nujaimi said in remarks published by al-Watan newspaper.

Muslim scholars are divided over the veil, disagreeing on whether and how much of a woman’s face should be covered. Saudi clerics widely recommend it.

The kingdom is ruled by the House of Saud in alliance with clerics from the austere Wahhabi school of Islam who oversee mosques, the judiciary and education and run their own coercive apparatus, the morals police.

Nujaimi and Garni are not members of the kingdom’s official Senior Scholars Authority, which has not commented on the French parliament’s decision.

TOURISM

Tourism to Western countries like France, while not forbidden, should be avoided in favor of Muslim countries where veils are allowed, the clerics said.

Every summer, tens of thousands of Saudi holidaymakers leave the kingdom and its searing heat to spend their vacation abroad, with many traveling to European countries.

“Tourism in a non-Muslim country is not indispensable, it is not needed, it is however allowed … but we have a lot of touristic regions in our country and there are a lot of Muslim countries that do not ban the niqab,” Nujaimi said.

Saudi Arabia is a major U.S. ally that has close trade and political ties with France, home to Western Europe’s largest Muslim minority of almost 5 million. It is thought that only about 2,000 women wear the full-length veil in France.

The new law, which still has to be vetted by France’s highest constitutional authority and approved by the Senate, could make France the second European country after Belgium to criminalize the veil.

Saudi King Abdullah postponed a visit to Paris that was scheduled to start one day before the French parliament voted on the ban, although Saudi officials did not link this postponement to the vote.

Comments by the two clerics come as the Louvre museum in Paris — with the support of the Saudi government — is displaying hundreds of artifacts from Saudi Arabia that have never been exhibited before, either at home nor abroad.

Among them are many pre-Islamic items. Exhibiting them in the kingdom would have triggered uproar from many clerics in the kingdom, who would see in it a revival of idolatry.

(Editing by Andrew Roche)

Kyrgyz forces remove barricades, Uzbeks still wary

OSH, Kyrgyzstan, June 20 (Reuters) – Kyrgyz forces started removing barriers dividing the city of Osh on Sunday as the government extended a state of emergency in some regions where up to 2,000 people have been killed in ethnic clashes.

But cars, tyres and piles of scrap metal remained in place across alleys in central Osh leading to burnt-out neighbourhoods occupied by ethnic Uzbeks, still fearful of more violence.

“We have become like Palestinians. They attack us with rifles while we can use only stones,” said Mavlyuda Mamadzhanova, 53, an ethnic Uzbek who fled her home when it was attacked.

The ethnic clashes in southern Kyrgyzstan have killed 2,000 people and uprooted 400,000, who are crammed into squalid camps on Kyrgyzstan’s sun-parched border with Uzbekistan with little access to clean water or food. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ For related news stories click on [ID:nLDE65A145] ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

The United States and Russia, which both operate military air bases in the Muslim country, are concerned that turmoil in Kyrgyzstan could spread to other parts of Central Asia, a vast former Soviet region north of Afghanistan.

The violence erupted on June 10 with coordinated attacks by unidentified individuals in balaclavas and quickly led to fierce fighting between Uzbeks and Kyrgyz.

Mainly Uzbek households were attacked in three days of unrest, with entire neighbourhoods burned to the ground. The United Nations says an estimated 1 million people were affected.

INTERIM GOVERNMENT

Interim leader Roza Otunbayeva, whose government assumed power after Kurmanbek Bakiyev was overthrown as president on April 7, has struggled to assert control in the south.

On Sunday, the interim government extended the state of emergency in Osh and three surrounding regions until June 25, two days before it plans to hold a referendum on constitutional reform that would devolve more power to a prime minister.

Russia said its foreign minister, Sergey Lavrov, and U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton “underscored the importance of the June 27 referendum … for stabilising the situation” during a phone call on Sunday.

Authorities say barricades must be removed to help restore normal life. A few shops reopened along the main Navoi Street.

“They are ethnic Uzbeks, but they are Kyrgyz citizens. They are not restricted in their movements,” said a Kyrgyz security official at a checkpoint, who declined to give his name. Armed with a Kalashnikov rifle, he wore a T-shirt and dark glasses.

However, Uzbek residents are afraid of more violence.

“We no longer trust these patrols. Last time, they only cleared the way for these gangs,” said Hairulla Jalalov, 53, who was helping coordinate refugees in an outlying district of Osh. He said the cut above his eye was caused by a stray bullet.

Sabir Mirzasharibov, 42, a construction worker in central Osh, said there would be no escape should more clashes break out: “We will die and that’s that. We’ve got no other way out.”

DESPERATE CONDITIONS

The U.S. envoy for Central Asia, Assistant Secretary of State Robert Blake, on Saturday urged Kyrgyzstan to create conditions for a safe return of refugees.

Kyrgyzstan’s tiny, under-equipped army has struggled to bring order to the south and security worries have prevented relief organisations reaching the worst-affected areas.

Besides camps on the Kyrgyz-Uzbek border, some refugees are living in desperate conditions on the outskirts of Osh.

One such district, Dekhkan Kishlak, houses around 1,500 refugees, some of them living in concrete stables and kennels used to breed fighting dogs.

“I know nothing certain about our future,” said Ergash Akhmetzhanov, 76. “Most probably we will have to go to the other life. We have nothing left.”

Kyrgyzstan is a patchwork of tribes and clans and Bakiyev’s departure has set off a fierce fight for control over money in a country that lies on a drug trafficking route from Afghanistan.

There has always been rivalry between Kyrgyz people and traditionally richer Uzbeks. Observers say Bakiyev loyalists are playing on ethnic divisions to try to regain power.

The interim government has accused supporters of the former president of igniting the violence. Bakiyev, an ethnic Kyrgyz currently in exile in Belarus, has denied any involvement. (Writing by Robin Paxton and Steve Gutterman; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

Kyrgyz forces remove barricades, Uzbeks wary

OSH, Kyrgyzstan, June 20 (Reuters) – Kyrgyz forces started removing barriers dividing the burnt-out city of Osh on Sunday as the government extended a state of emergency in some regions where up to 2,000 people have died in ethnic clashes.

A Reuters reporter said authorities had removed makeshift barriers in central Osh, but cars, tyres and piles of scrap metal remained in place across alleys leading to neighbourhoods occupied by ethnic Uzbeks, still fearful of more violence.

“Look at the situation we have in this town. Why should we be in any hurry to dismantle this?” said Sabir Mirzasharibov, 42, an ethnic Uzbek construction worker.

Ethnic clashes in southern Kyrgyzstan have caused 2,000 deaths and uprooted 400,000 people, who are crammed into squalid camps on Kyrgyzstan’s sun-parched border with Uzbekistan with little access to clean water or food.

The United States and Russia, which both operate military air bases in the strategic Muslim country, are concerned that turmoil in Kyrgyzstan could spread to other parts of Central Asia, a vast former Soviet region north of Afghanistan.

The violence erupted on June 10 with coordinated attacks by unidentified individuals in balaclavas and quickly led to fierce fighting between Uzbeks and Kyrgyz, witnesses said.

Mainly Uzbek households were attacked in three days of unrest, with entire neighbourhoods burned to the ground. The United Nations says an estimated 1 million people were affected.

Interim leader Roza Otunbayeva, whose government assumed power after President Kurmanbek Bakiyev was overthrown in a revolt on April 7, has struggled to assert control in the shattered south.

On Sunday, the interim government extended the state of emergency in Osh and three surrounding regions until June 25, two days before it plans to hold a referendum on constitutional reform that would devolve more power to a prime minister.

It is also enforcing a night-time curfew in Osh.

Kyrgyz authorities in the city say the barricades should be removed to help restore normal life. Tree trunks, a truck-mounted crane and a bus had been removed and a few shops reopened along the main Navoi Street, named after a mediaeval Uzbek poet.

“They are ethnic Uzbeks, but they are Kyrgyz citizens. They are not restricted in their movements,” said a Kyrgyz security official at a police checkpoint, who declined to give his name. Armed with a Kalashnikov rifle, he was dressed in a T-shirt and dark glasses.

However, Uzbek residents are afraid of more violence.

Mirzasharibov said he and many Uzbeks would never leave their home region for good. Asked what he would do if clashes resumed, he said: “We will die and that’s that. We’ve got no other way out.”

DESPERATE CONDITIONS

The official death toll is about 190 but the government says it is probably 10 times higher.

The U.S. envoy for Central Asia on Saturday urged Kyrgyzstan to create conditions for a safe return of refugees.

Assistant Secretary of State Robert Blake, speaking after talks with Kyrgyz officials, said an international investigation must be held into the possible causes of the violence.

Kyrgyzstan’s tiny, under-equipped army has struggled to bring order to the south and relief organisations have been unable to reach the worst-affected areas for security reasons.

Besides camps on either side of the Kyrgyz-Uzbek border, some refugees are living in desperate conditions on the outskirts of Osh.

Kyrgyzstan is a patchwork of tribes and clans and Bakiyev’s departure has set off a fierce fight for control over money in a country that lies on a drug trafficking route from Afghanistan.

There has always been rivalry between Kyrgyz people and traditionally richer Uzbeks. Observers say Bakiyev loyalists are playing on ethnic divisions to try to regain power.

The interim government has accused supporters of the former president of igniting the violence. Bakiyev, an ethnic Kyrgyz currently in exile in Belarus, has denied any involvement. (For related news stories click on [ID:nLDE65A145])) (Writing by Robin Paxton; editing by Andrew Dobbie)

Malaysia parliament votes to censure Anwar

Malaysian lawmakers moved towards censuring opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim on Thursday, paving the way for his suspension from parliament and raising tensions ahead of a key weekend by-election.

The House of Representatives passed a motion to refer Anwar to the Rights and Privileges Committee over his allegations that the government’s “1Malaysia” racial unity slogan was copied from “One Israel”, the tagline of a 1999 Israeli political alliance.

The issue has stirred passions in Malaysia, a mainly Muslim country in Southeast Asia that does not recognise Israel diplomatically.

The privileges committee, which will meet in the next session of parliament scheduled in June, would in turn recommend a penalty for Anwar. That could include a ban from parliament.

The move towards a censure further raises tensions as the government of Prime Minister Najib Razak contests Sunday’s by-lection, seen as an early verdict of his economic reform pledges after a year in office.

The seat was won by a narrow margin by the opposition when last contested in 2008 and the race is considered too close to call.

“This is a very unhealthy trend, very undemocratic and regressive in nature, it is a complete disregard for the rule of law and runs contrary to democratic principles,” Anwar told reporters in parliament’s lobby after the vote.

Anwar’s allegation, which the government and its advisers have denied, led to a rowdy debate in parliament before the opposition staged a walkout.

“He misled the House because ’1Malaysia’ is not from ‘One Israel’. He knows Muslim Malays are sensitive on Israel so that’s why he chose it,” said Nazri Aziz, Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department.

Anwar is on trial on what he insists is a trumped-up charge of sodomy, a repeat of similar charges made in 1998 when he was dismissed as deputy prime minister. He was initially convicted in that trial but the verdict was overturned.

Political tensions in Malaysia have been high since the 2008 general elections in which the ruling National Front alliance suffered record defeats, losing five of Malaysia’s 13 states and its once iron-clad two-thirds control in parliament.

Najib’s “1Malaysia” campaign, on billboards all over the country, is aimed at winning back ethnic Chinese and Indian voters to the National Front coalition that has ruled Malaysia for 52 years.

(Reporting by Razak Ahmad; Editing by Ron Popeski)

Musharraf’s govt ‘failed’ to protect Bhutto: UN

In a damning report, a UN investigation into Benazir Bhutto’s killing on Friday concluded that the then military ruler Pervez Musharraf’s government “failed” to protect the ex-premier despite being aware of the serious threats to her life.

The UN-appointed independent panel report also slammed the powerful ISI and the Pakistani police, saying they “deliberately failed” to properly probe 54-year-old Bhutto’s murder which could have been averted.

“Bhutto’s assassination could have been prevented,” said the much-awaited 65-page report by a three-member panel headed by Chile’s UN ambassador Heraldo Munoz.

The investigators stressed that besides passing on messages of the serious threats to Bhutto, no proactive measures were taken by the authorities to neutralise the danger. However, the report does not reveal who killed Bhutto.

“The responsibility for Bhutto’s security on the day of the assassination rested with the federal government, the government of Punjab and the Rawalpindi district police… none of these entities took the necessary measures to respond to the extraordinary fresh and urgent security risk that they knew she faced,” Munoz told reporters.

“A range of government officials failed profoundly in their efforts first to protect Bhutto and second to investigate with vigour all those responsible for her murder not only in the execution of the attack but also in its conception, planning and financing,” he said.

The panel pointed out that Bhutto faced a threat from several sources, including Al-Qaeda, Pakistani Taliban, other Jihadist groups and “so called establishment in Pakistan” that consisted of elements of military commanders, intelligence agency, allied political parties and business partners.

Bhutto, the first woman to become prime minister of a Muslim country, was killed on December 27, 2007 in a gun and suicide attack after addressing an election rally in Rawalpindi, a garrison city near the capital Islamabad.

The Munoz-led panel, which commenced its probe on July 1, 2009, was to have submitted its report on December 31, 2009 but its term was extended for another three months. It was tasked with establishing the facts and circumstances of the slaying and was not empowered to identify culprits.

However, the report, initially scheduled for March 30, was delayed after Pakistan made a request to the panel urging it to include input from former US secretary of state Condoleezza Rice, Afghan President Hamid Karzai and Saudi Arabia.

The report severely rebuked Pakistan’s spy agency ISI for interfering in criminal investigations after her assassination, which subordinated law and order.

Pakistan in spotlight at Washington nuclear summit

ISLAMABAD, April 11 (Reuters) – Pakistan will confront its reputation as a proliferator head-on this week when its prime minister addresses a global summit in Washington aimed at keeping nuclear weapons out of the hands of terrorists.

Arch-rival India and other critics could however undercut Pakistan by reminding the world of its nuclear smuggling, highlighting the Taliban insurgency and fanning fears of a Muslim country in chaos where militants could seize atomic material.

“India will demand restrictions imposed on Pakistan’s nuclear programme,” said Shahid-ur-Rehman, a Pakistani journalist and author of “Long Road to Chagai”, a book on Pakistan’s nuclear programme.

“Their main stress will be on securing Pakistan’s nuclear assets by the world,” he told Reuters.

“Pakistan’s efforts will be to counter that and convince them that our National Command Authority, which oversees the country’s strategic assets, is very effective and that our nuclear assets are safe and secure.”

Pakistani Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani will speak at the summit after meeting President Barack Obama on Sunday. There are no plans for Gilani and his Indian counterpart, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, to meet, although the leaders of the nuclear-armed rivals may have a brief “encounter”.

Obama called the Nuclear Security Summit to reach a common understanding on the threat posed by nuclear terrorism and an agreement on steps to secure all loose nuclear material within four years to stop it falling into the hands of groups such as al Qaeda.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton says the April 12-13 gathering of 47 nations is possibly the largest assembly of world leaders in the United States since 1945.

Two countries not on the guest list are Iran and North Korea, both of which are locked in their own nuclear standoffs with the West. And both countries have allegedly benefited from the smuggling network of Abdul Qadeer Khan, the father of Pakistan’s nuclear bomb and a national hero. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ (For full coverage of Pakistan click on [ID:nAFPAK] ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

PRESSURE

It is this history — and Pakistan’s uncertain future — that has put the country’s nuclear programme in the spotlight this week. Experts say Pakistan’s arsenal and stockpile of weapons-grade material represent the area of greatest risk, because of huge internal security threats from the Taliban and al Qaeda.

“Because of Pakistan’s so-called past, that there was proliferation from Pakistan and that Pakistani scientists had met Osama bin Laden … there will be pressure on Pakistan,” said Rehman, referring to reported meetings involving two retired Pakistani nuclear scientists before the Sept. 11 attacks.

“America and the West’s biggest concern is that weapons of mass destruction should not fall into extremists’ hands and, in this case, they seem to be tacitly pointing at Pakistan. India and the anti-Pakistani lobby have always tried to exploit that and they will try to do it again.”

Pakistan dismisses that concern, calling it “speculative”.

“I do not see any possibility, whatsoever, of Pakistani material, or nuclear technology falling into the wrong hands,” a spokesman for the Foreign Ministry, Abdul Basit, told Reuters.

“India knows full well how secure Pakistan’s strategic assets are.”

Obama says he’s confident in the security of Pakistan’s arsenal, but India isn’t so sure.

The neighbours have fought three wars since being carved out of colonial India in 1947 and engaged in several smaller conflicts, including one in 1999 that threatened to go nuclear.

Both nations conducted nuclear tests in 1998.

Currently, they have an agreement to share prior information about new missile tests they plan to carry out, as well as an agreement to share details about each other’s nuclear facilities and their safety on a periodical basis.

But their armies often exchange fire across the border, and peace talks are held only intermittently.

“There is a lot of mistrust as India keeps on receiving reports of secret (nuclear) installations in Pakistan, and it believes that Islamabad is not sharing all its details,” said Naresh Chandra, India’s former envoy to Pakistan.

India is aware, however, of Pakistan’s importance to U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan, so it doesn’t expect much American intervention between the two on nuclear issues, Chandra added.

There is more at stake in Washington than nuclear one-upmanship between old enemies. Pakistan’s economy has been hammered by energy shortfalls and high on its wish-list is a civilian nuclear deal with the United States like the one India received under President George W. Bush.

It has been repeatedly rebuffed by the United States — although lately more gently — and media reports in Pakistan suggested China may step up and help with civilian nuclear technology.

That would likely make India even more suspicious because of its own rivalry with China. The two fought a war in 1962.

Washington also would like Pakistan’s help in curtailing Iran’s nuclear programme, although there appears little chance of that.

According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, India has between 60-70 warheads while Pakistan has about 60. Neither India nor Pakistan are party to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons that Obama hopes to strengthen. (Additional reporting by Kamran Haider and Augustine Anthony; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan) (For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here)

No caning sentence for beer-drinking Malaysia woman

Malaysia has dropped a caning sentence imposed on a woman for drinking beer, a case that has raised concerns of intolerance in the mainly Muslim country. Shukarno Mutalib, the father of the 32-year-old woman, told Reuters he had received a letter from Islamic authorities indicating the caning has been replaced by another penalty, but few details had been given.

“I have also been asked to present my daughter before the religious authorities on Friday for her to undergo a ‘three week’ punishment, but we do not know yet whether it will be community service or detention,” he said.

Islamic affairs officials could not be immediately contacted.

The woman, Kartika Sari Dewi Shukarno, was sentenced to six strokes of the cane and a fine after she was caught drinking beer by Islamic enforcement officials two years ago at a hotel lounge in the central state of Pahang.

In February, three Muslim women were caned for the first time under Islamic laws for having sex out of wedlock.

Malaysia practises a dual-track legal system, with Islamic criminal and family law applicable to Muslims. Non-Muslims, who make up about 45 percent of Malaysia’s 28 million residents, are subject to civil law.

The canings reflect growing conservatism in a country long portraying itself as a moderate Islamic state and have begun to concern investors.

Since taking office in April last year, Prime Minister Najib has pledged political and economic reforms to woo investments and reverse his ruling coalition’s historic election losses in 2008.

But ethnic and religious tensions have worsened following a row sparked after a court in December last year allowed Christians to use the word “Allah”.

Political uncertainties in Malaysia since the 2008 election has hit net portfolio and direct investment outflows to the tune of $61 billion in 2008 and 2009, according to official data.

(Reporting by Razak Ahmad; Editing by Ron Popeski)

No caning sentence for beer-drinking Malaysia woman

(Reuters) – Malaysia has dropped a caning sentence imposed on a woman for drinking beer, a case that has raised concerns of intolerance in the mainly Muslim country. Shukarno Mutalib, the father of the 32-year-old woman, told Reuters he had received a letter from Islamic authorities indicating the caning has been replaced by another penalty, but few details had been given.

World

“I have also been asked to present my daughter before the religious authorities on Friday for her to undergo a ‘three week’ punishment, but we do not know yet whether it will be community service or detention,” he said.

Islamic affairs officials could not be immediately contacted.

The woman, Kartika Sari Dewi Shukarno, was sentenced to six strokes of the cane and a fine after she was caught drinking beer by Islamic enforcement officials two years ago at a hotel lounge in the central state of Pahang.

In February, three Muslim women were caned for the first time under Islamic laws for having sex out of wedlock.

Malaysia practices a dual-track legal system, with Islamic criminal and family law applicable to Muslims. Non-Muslims, who make up about 45 percent of Malaysia’s 28 million residents, are subject to civil law.

The canings reflect growing conservatism in a country long portraying itself as a moderate Islamic state and have begun to concern investors.

Since taking office in April last year, Prime Minister Najib has pledged political and economic reforms to woo investments and reverse his ruling coalition’s historic election losses in 2008.

But ethnic and religious tensions have worsened following a row sparked after a court in December last year allowed Christians to use the word “Allah.”

Political uncertainties in Malaysia since the 2008 election has hit net portfolio and direct investment outflows to the tune of $61 billion in 2008 and 2009, according to official data.

(Reporting by Razak Ahmad; Editing by Ron Popeski)

Malaysia’s Anwar sodomy trial postponed until May

The sodomy trial of Malaysian opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim has been postponed to May, prolonging tension over what the opposition says is a politically motivated case.

Judge Zabidin Mohd Diah on Thursday ordered the deferral after the defence asked for dates that would allow Anwar to attend parliament.

The trial was due to have resumed on Thursday with a defence cross examination of his 23 year-old male accuser.

Sodomy is a criminal offence in this mainly Muslim country and if convicted, the 63 year-old Anwar could be sentenced to up to 20 years jail, effectively ending his political career.

“This is a malicious, trumped up case and shouldn’t have started in the first place,” Anwar told reporters outside court.

He was first tried on corruption charges and then for sodomy after his sacking as deputy prime minister in 1998 amid a political feud with then premier Mahathir Mohamad.

His sodomy conviction was overturned in 2004, freeing him from a six-year prison sentence to lead a three-party opposition alliance that staged its biggest electoral success in 2008.

The opposition deprived the government of its two-thirds parliamentary majority and ended up in control of five of the country’s 13 states.

Anwar returned to parliament after a bar on him holding office lapsed and has led the opposition to victory in seven out of nine state and national by-elections since the 2008 polls.

(Reporting by Razak Ahmad; Editing by Nick Macfie)

‘Burka like a paper bag on head’ remark lands Brit MP in trouble

London, Mar.24 (ANI): A Conservative Member of Parliament (MP) has invited trouble by abusing the ‘burka’, as a probe has been ordered against him for inciting racial hatred.

During a parliamentary debate last month, Philip Hollobone had urged the House of Commons to ‘seriously consider’ banning the garment, which is often used by Muslim women.

“Wearing a burka was like going round with a paper bag over your head,” Hollobone had reportedly said on the floor of the house.

Meanwhile, Hollobone has criticised the Northamptonshire Rights and Equality Council (NREC) for complaining against him.

He blasted NREC for challenging the freedom of speech while attempting to have him prosecuted.

“It”s complete hypocrisy. They talk on one hand about freedom of speech and expression and then without even making contact try to get me prosecuted. In this country you should be able to have a debate about controversial subjects without the threat of police action. That”s how democracy works,” The Sun quoted Hollobone, as saying.

It may be noted that NREC had sent letter to the MP criticising his stance on Muslim women who choose to wear the burka in public.

Speaking during a debate on the occasion of International Women”s Day (March 11) last week, Hollobone had insisted that wearing a burka was not in accordance with the country’s culture.

“This is Britain. We are not a Muslim country. Covering your face in public is strange and to many people both intimidating and offensive,” Hollobone had said.

According to an estimate, burkas are worn by about 100,000 of the 2.4million Muslims living in Britain. (ANI)

OK to be gay – as long as character repents

Filmmakers can depict homosexuals for the first time in Malaysia as long as they repent or even go straight in the end.

Strict censorship rules in the mostly Muslim country mean books and films are routinely banned or have scenes deleted that are deemed detrimental to moral values or religious sensitivities.

The new guidelines reverse a ban on scenes featuring homosexuality, Malaysian Film Producers Association president Ahmad Puad Onah says.

But there is a catch.

“We are now allowed to show these scenes,” he said, “as long as we portray good triumphing over evil and there is a lesson learnt in the film, such as from a gay [character] who turns into a [straight] man.

“Previously we are not allowed to show these at all.”

The new rules, he insists, will allow greater freedom of expression for filmmakers.

But kissing, undressing and obscenity scenes will still be banned.

“We can do almost anything now but we are urged to give due considerations on the film’s impact on certain areas like public order, religion, socio-culture elements and moral values.”

- AFP

Sky’s limit, but not in wedlock

ISLAMABAD: Ambreen made Pakistani history by becoming one of the country’s first female fighter pilots, but on Sunday she was due to swap her flight schedule in one of the world’s most dangerous countries for an arranged marriage with a stranger.

“It’s all set and planned, but I haven’t talked to him,” she admits, her face scrubbed clean and wearing a Pakistan Air Force (PAF) jumpsuit — a far cry from the make-up and ornate gown she’ll wear for the wedding.

The wedding between Flight Lieutenant Ambreen Gul, 25, and an engineer from Islamabad has been arranged by their families in the best Pakistani tradition.

When she wakes up on Monday — International Women’s Day — she’ll be married to a man she has only seen once before and with whom she has barely exchanged a word.

Pakistan is known to be a conservative Muslim country, where the United Nations says that only 40% of adult women are literate. Here, women are victims of violence and abuse, and the country still lacks a law against domestic violence.

But in 2006, seven women broke into one of Pakistan’s most exclusive male clubs to graduate as fighter pilots — perhaps the most prestigious job in the powerful military and for six decades closed to the fairer sex.
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Burqini banned in Italian town

London, Aug.20 (ANI): Muslim women have been banned from wearing the body-concealing swimming costume known as a burqini in the northern Italian town of Varallo Sesia.

According to The Telegraph and Italy’s official ANSA news agency, the burqini consists of a headscarf, tunic and loose leggings and women wearing the garment, face a fine of 500 Euros (430 pounds).

Gianluca Buonanno, the mayor of Piedmont in northern Italy, said: “The sight of a ‘masked woman’ could disturb small children, not to mention problems of hygiene. We don’t have to be tolerant all the time.”

Justifying the move, Buonanno added: “Imagine a western woman bathing in a bikini in a Muslim country. The consequences could be decapitation, prison or deportation. We are merely prohibiting the use of the burqini.”

Last week a swimming pool in Paris refused entry to a burqini-clad woman on similar grounds, adding to tensions over Muslim dress in France. (ANI)

Jordan may land in jail over nude sunbathing in Maldives

London, May 18 (ANI): Katie Price a.k.a Jordan faces the prospects of being jailed after the busty model was caught sunbathing in Maldives – naked.

The 30-year-old broke strict Muslim laws by shedding her clothes to soak up the sun – a crime that can land tourists in jail, reports the Mirror.

Foreign Office travel advice warns: “Nudism and topless sunbathing are prohibited throughout the Maldives including on resort islands. The Maldives is a Muslim country and serious violations of law may lead to a prison sentence.”

And an angry local fisherman said: “This woman’s behaviour is unacceptable.

“If she comes to a Muslim country she should respect Islamic laws and customs,” he added.he glamour flew to the five star Conrad Resort and Spa on Rengali island after her acrimonious split from husband Peter Andre. (ANI)

Jordan may land in jail over nude sunbathing in Maldives

London, May 18 (ANI): Katie Price a.k.a Jordan faces the prospects of being jailed after the busty model was caught sunbathing in Maldives – naked.

The 30-year-old broke strict Muslim laws by shedding her clothes to soak up the sun – a crime that can land tourists in jail, reports the Mirror.

Foreign Office travel advice warns: “Nudism and topless sunbathing are prohibited throughout the Maldives including on resort islands. The Maldives is a Muslim country and serious violations of law may lead to a prison sentence.”

And an angry local fisherman said: “This woman’s behaviour is unacceptable.

“If she comes to a Muslim country she should respect Islamic laws and customs,” he added.he glamour flew to the five star Conrad Resort and Spa on Rengali island after her acrimonious split from husband Peter Andre. (ANI)

Jordan may land in jail over nude sunbathing in Maldives

London, May 18 (ANI): Katie Price a.k.a Jordan faces the prospects of being jailed after the busty model was caught sunbathing in Maldives – naked.

The 30-year-old broke strict Muslim laws by shedding her clothes to soak up the sun – a crime that can land tourists in jail, reports the Mirror.

Foreign Office travel advice warns: “Nudism and topless sunbathing are prohibited throughout the Maldives including on resort islands. The Maldives is a Muslim country and serious violations of law may lead to a prison sentence.”

And an angry local fisherman said: “This woman’s behaviour is unacceptable.

“If she comes to a Muslim country she should respect Islamic laws and customs,” he added.

The glamour flew to the five star Conrad Resort and Spa on Rengali island after her acrimonious split from husband Peter Andre. (ANI)

Chinese Premier hopes Iran will resolve nuclear standoff soon

Sanya (China), Apr. 18 (ANI): Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao hopes that Iran will resume talks with world powers soon to resolve the standoff over the nuclear issue.

During his meeting with Iran’s Vice-President Parviz Davoudi, Wen said the Muslim country should take up the nuclear issue to the 2009 Boao Forum for Asia.

The meeting came two days after Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad urged for warmer ties with Washington and announced that Teheran will offer a new package for negotiations, the China Daily reports.

US President Barack Obama’s government has sought direct dialogue with Iran – in sharp contrast to the Bush administration’s tough talk.

China, the US, Russia, Britain, France and Germany decided earlier this month to invite Iran back to the negotiation table.

Experts feel the moves indicate that two long-time adversaries are seeking to ease a nearly three-decade-old diplomatic standoff.

“The Chinese government hopes the relevant sides involved (in the Iranian nuclear issue) grasp the current favorable opportunity, show positive gestures and resume negotiations as soon as possible,” reads the news release on the talks, issued by the Foreign Ministry.

To that effect, China would like to continue its constructive role, Wen said.

Davoudi said Teheran wanted to settle the nuclear issue on the basis of mutual respect and improve its relations with “relevant countries”.

China respects Iran’s possession of nuclear power for peaceful use, Wen said, adding Beijing also “firmly protects” global nuclear non-proliferation efforts. (ANI)

Zardari signs sharia deal following National Assembly’s green signal

Islamabad, Apr.14 (ANI): Following the National Assembly’s nod, Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari has signed the sharia law deal which is to be implemented in the North West Frontier Province’s Swat region.

“Yes, the president has signed the Nizam-e-Adl Regulation before leaving for Dubai on a two-day visit,” The Daily Times quoted presidential spokesman Farhatullah Babar, as saying.

The National Assembly also gave its green signal to a resolution asking Zardari to sign the sharia regulation to be implemented in the Malakand division of the province according to the peace accord inked between the NWFP government and the Tehreek Nifaz-e-Shariat-e-Muhammadi (TNSM).

Addressing the members of the National Assembly after putting the regulation before the house, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani said the regulation had been placed before the house to build a broad national consensus and establish the supremacy of parliament.

Gilani said he had also discussed the issue with the NWFP government and TNSM, and both were of the view that the regulation should be passed as soon as possible.

“I have also talked to Asfandyar Wali Khan and Fazlur Rehman and both recommended immediate passing of the resolution,” Gilani said.

Meanwhile, both the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and the TNSM have welcomed parliament’s move.

Spokesperson of the Taliban’s Swat chapter Muslim Khan said being the assembly of a Muslim country it was absolutely correct to pass the resolution.

“The endorsement of Nizam-e-Adl by parliament was the result of efforts by Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani and the ANP,” TNSM chief Sufi Muhammad said.

Some political parties, however, have expressed their discontent over the issue.

Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz) leader Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan refused to comment on the deal terming it as a ‘sensitive issue.’

Khan accused the government of dragging the parliament in the issue to avoid pressuer from the international community.

The Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) said it does not support Taliban’s ‘forced sharia.’

MQM chief Altaf Hussain said Talibanisation and religious extremists were defaming Pakistan. (ANI)

Foreign Minister: Bangladesh is secular – not Muslim – country

Dhaka – Bangladesh’s Foreign Minister Dipu Moni on Saturday described her country as secular with a majority Muslim population, and not a moderate Muslim state as portrayed by the international community. “Bangladesh is a non-communal country where the majority of the people belongs to the Muslim faith. We achieved our independence through an armed struggle with a dream of establishing a secular nation,” the minister told reporters after delivering a lecture in Dhaka on Bangladesh’s foreign policy.

She said the ruling Awami League party, which led the nation in 1971 liberation war against Pakistan, never believed in the idea of moderate democratic Muslim country, which most Western diplomats consider Bangladesh.

Many countries have been given different labels but it is not necessary to take someone else’s definition when it contradicts one’s own fundamental values, she said.

After independence from Pakistan, Bangladesh drew up a constitution with secularism as a basic principle in 1972, but subsequent military dictators replaced secularism in the constitution with Islam as state religion in mid-1980s.

The provision of Islam as a state religion is theoretically still in force and there has been no move by the ruling Awami League- alliance government to return to the original constitution. (dpa)

Now the Obama party is over, Turkey needs to deliver

ISTANBUL (Reuters) – U.S. President Barack Obama’s call on Turkey to help resolve conflicts from the Middle East to Afghanistan is an endorsement the secular democracy has long sought, but meeting those expectations will be far harder.

Obama chose Turkey as the first Muslim country to visit since becoming president, highlighting the importance he places on ties with a prickly NATO ally spanning two continents and wielding increasing influence in a volatile region.

“I came here out of my respect to Turkey’s democracy and culture and my belief that Turkey plays a critically important role in the region and in the world,” Obama said during his two-day visit this week to Ankara and Istanbul.

Turkey’s AK Party government has sought recognition for its role in helping fix problems in and with neighboring countries, which it sees as ultimately benefiting Turkey’s own security.

The Islamist-rooted AK Party has mediated between Israel and Syria, brought warring Palestinian factions together, and tried to patch up differences between Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan has been criticized by Israel and the former U.S. administration for seeking to bring the Palestinian militant group Hamas, which rules the Gaza Strip, out of isolation and for his criticism of Israel’s war on Gaza.

“The Obama visit opens up a series of windows of opportunities for Turkey … but the burden is now on Turkey’s shoulders and how it can make good on this,” Faruk Logoglu, a former Turkish ambassador to Washington, told Reuters.

“If we choose to continue to play, like Iran, a role of a regional power with a voice of our own, then we will not be very effective. But if we do it in a solemn and quiet manner it will be much more effective.”

Erdogan’s public spat over Gaza with Israeli President Shimon Peres in Davos in January won praise from Arab countries but raised question marks in European diplomatic circles about Turkey’s ability to be a neutral negotiator. Turkey’s tough stance on the appointment of NATO’s next chief put it at odds with the alliance’s members, forcing Obama to intervene.

MUSLIM WORLD

Obama praised Turkey for its strong European roots, democracy and ability to reach out to the Muslim world. He said Turkey could help bridge the divide between America and the Islamic world.

Obama is trying to repair the damage left by his predecessor, George W. Bush, and has made clear he wants a more conciliatory approach to solving global problems from Iran’s nuclear program to the stalled Middle East peace process.

“Turkey has a long history of being an ally and a friend of both Israel and its neighbors. And so it can occupy a unique position in trying to resolve some of these differences,” he said.

Ties between Turkey and the United States are now on the mend after years of tensions, mainly due to the Iraqi war.

Critics of Erdogan say his foreign policy, spearheaded by adviser Ahmet Davutoglu, is driven by a desire to boost Turkey’s role in the Muslim world and reconnect with its Ottoman roots. They criticize Erdogan for distancing Turkey from the West.

Analyst say quiet diplomacy will help Turkey in its quest to help resolve the Middle East peace process.

“Turkey’s usefulness is first improving quality and dialogue between Arabs and Israelis and factions within the Palestinians, and secondly preparing the groundwork, not the ultimate agreement,” said Logoglu, adding he was skeptical that the government would pursue quiet diplomacy.

ARMENIA, NORTHERN IRAQ

Turkey’s European Union membership bid will also be affected by how it tries to solve conflicts with its neighbors.

Turkey has finally begun normalizing ties with Armenia. The two countries are at odds over Yerevan’s dispute with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh and whether the massacres of Armenians by Ottoman Turks during World War One amounted to genocide.

Turkey will now be under pressure to deliver on Armenia. Diplomats believe Ankara’s efforts with Yerevan have given Obama some time to hold off on a U.S. Congress resolution that seeks to label the 1915 killings as genocide, a move that would hurt U.S.-Turkish ties.

“Turkey has come a long way in mending fences with neighbors,” said Hugh Pope, author of books on Turkey and an analyst with the International Crisis Group.

“Twenty years ago, all countries around itself had daggers drawn at Turkey. Now we are at the point of normalizing relations with Armenia. Northern Iraq was a weight around Turkey’s neck and Turkey is working on fixing it.”

Ties between Turkey and Iraq have been strained over the presence of Kurdish rebels based in northern Iraq from where they attack Turkish territory. The United States wants better ties as they draw down their troop levels in Iraq.