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Boycott Bahasa Melayu, if 'ALLAH' belongs to UMNO

Malaysia religious authorities have threatened to sue the country's top legal body for using the word "Allah" on its Web site, in another dispute over the issue in the multicultural country.

The Islamic religious council in central Selangor state said it would take action against the Malaysian Bar, which represents about 12,000 lawyers, for using the word as a translation for "God" in two online polls on its Web site.

The council's remarks came amid a long-running battle between the government and a Roman Catholic newspaper, which has been threatened with closure for using the disputed word in its Malay-language edition.

The government has argued that the word should be used only by Muslims, who are the majority in Malaysia. Most are ethnic Malays.

The Malaysian Bar's polls asked lawyers to vote on whether any particular race in Malaysia had an exclusive right to use "Allah" and whether non-Muslim religious publications should be allowed to use the word.

"The issue raised in the polls can threaten the sensitivity of Muslims," the head of the religious council, Mohamad Adzib Mohamad Isa, said in a statement.

He said it was empowered under religious laws to lay charges against anyone misusing the word "Allah."

The Malaysian Bar said it would defend its use of the word.

"I haven't received a (legal) notice yet. We are prepared to challenge it," its president, Ragunath Kesavan, said.

Religion and language can sensitive issues in Malaysia, which experienced deadly race riots in 1969.

About 60% of the nation's 27 million people are ethnic Malay Muslims, who dominate the government.

The rest of the population includes indigenous tribes, as well as ethnic Chinese and Indians - practicing Buddhism, Christianity and Hinduism, among other faiths.

AFP
20/03/09

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