Friday, April 20, 2007

மலேசிய இந்துக்களுக்கு நடக்கும் கொடுமைகள் பற்றி எகிப்து பத்திரிக்கை

மலேசிய இந்துக்களுக்கு அடிப்படை உரிமைக்ள் மறுக்கப்படுவதை கண்டித்து எகிப்து பத்திரிக்கை செய்தி வெளியிட்டிருக்கிறது.

தமிழ்நாட்டு இந்துக்களுக்குக்கூட வராத ஒரு அற உணர்வு எகிப்து பத்திரிக்கைக்கு இருப்பதை கண்டு மகிழ்ச்சியாக இருக்கிறது.

சொந்த சகோதரர்கள் துன்பத்தில் சாதல் கண்டும் சிந்தை இரங்காரடி கிளியே செய்தவறியாறடி என்று மிக சரியாகவே தமிழ் மக்களைப் பற்றி பாரதி பாடிச் சென்றிருக்கிறான்.

எகிப்து பத்திரிக்கை செய்தி

Islamic authorities remove wives, children of Hindus
April 19, 2007


KUALA LUMPUR -- Two Malaysian Hindu men Thursday said that they were battling Islamic authorities after being forcibly separated from their Muslim wives in cases highlighting growing religious tensions here.

Suresh Veerapan issued a plea for help after his wife Revathi Masoosai and their baby were forcibly removed from their home and she was put in an Islamic rehabilitation camp.

He said that Revathi, an ethnic Indian and practicing Hindu born to Muslim parents, was sent to the camp for 100 days in January by Islamic authorities in western Malacca state.

Her detention was extended Wednesday by a Sharia court by 80 days, Suresh said, adding that Islamic authorities in March had also taken the 16-month-old baby from him and given the child to his Muslim in-laws.

"We are treated like animals, not humans, the way they have separated me from my wife and baby," said a weeping Suresh, adding that Islamic officials were now keeping him from visiting Revathi. "When I asked them why the extension, they told me she did not cooperate with the authorities there," Suresh said.

Revathi's detention is the latest in a string of religious conflicts involving Muslims and non-Muslims that have sparked outrage in multi-ethnic Malaysia.

In a separate case, another Malaysian Hindu man Thursday vowed to fight Islamic authorities for custody of five of his children who were forcibly separated from him, along with his Muslim wife.
P. Marimuthu said that his wife Raimah Bibi Noordin and their five young Hindu children were taken from their home two weeks ago by religious officials, who said that she was a Muslim.

Raimah and the children are being held in a ethnic Malay Muslim village in western Selangor slate, and Marimuthu's lawyers Thursday filed an application with a high court in the west of Kuala Lumpur to free them.

"I just want to at least get my children back, I do not want them to be Muslims as they were brought up as Hindus," Marimuthu said, adding that he had one son living with him who escaped the raid.

Marimuthu said that Raimah, an ethnic Indian, was adopted by an Indian Muslim family and was a practicing Hindu.

Rights groups have condemned the actions of the Islamic authorities in Raimah's case, saying that they breached the country's constitution, which guarantees freedom of religious practice.

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மனித உரிமைகளும் மத உரிமைகளும் முஸ்லீம்களுக்கும் கிறிஸ்துவர்களுக்கும் மட்டுமே உண்டு இந்துக்களுக்கு எந்த உரிமையும் கிடையாது என்று நினைத்துக்கொண்டிருப்பவர்கள் இந்தியாவில் மட்டும்தான் உண்டு. எகிப்தில் அப்படி யாரும் நினைப்பதில்லை என்பது ஆறுதலான செய்தி.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

//Her detention was extended Wednesday by a Sharia court by 80 days, Suresh said, adding that Islamic authorities in March had also taken the 16-month-old baby from him and given the child to his Muslim in-laws.//

இதுதான் ஷரீயா எனும் அரபி மனுதர்மம். இந்த அல்லாஹ்வின் சட்டங்களை இந்தியாவில் அமல்படுத்த வேண்டும் என்றுதான் இந்த அடிப்படைவாதிகள் சத்தமிட்டு வருகின்றனர். இந்த அல்லாஹ்வின் சட்டங்களை தமிழ்நாட்டில் கொண்டு வருவதற்குத்தான் மதுரை இமாம் அலி பலரின் உயிரைக் குடித்தான், தன் உயிரையும் இழந்தான்.


இந்த ஷரீயத்தை அமல்படுத்த வேண்டும் என்று நண்பன் ஷாஜகான் ஒரு பதிவில் எழுதியிருந்தார்.


இப்படி கோரிக்கை வைப்பது, மதச்சார்பின்மை, மனித நேயம். குண்டு வைப்பவர்களை நியாயப்படுத்துவது மனித உரிமை, நேயம். ஆனால், இதையெல்லாம் விமர்சித்தால் அதற்குப் பெயர் காழ்ப்பு, அவதூறு!

எழில் said...

கோர்டுக்கு போக மாரிமுத்துக்கு அனுமதி கிடைத்திருக்கிறது.

கட்டாய மதம் மாற்றும் இத்தகைய செயல்களை சகோதரர்கள் கண்டிக்க வேண்டும்.

இண்டர்நேஷனல் ஹெரால்ட் டிரிபியூன் செய்தி
http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/04/24/asia/AS-GEN-Malaysia-Religious-Dispute.php

Malaysian court to hear Hindu man's lawsuit after family seized by Islamic authorities
The Associated PressPublished: April 24, 2007

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia: A Malaysian court agreed Tuesday to quickly hear a lawsuit by a Hindu man who has accused Islamic authorities of illegally detaining his wife and five children, his lawyer said.

Lawyers for Marimuthu Periasamy, an ethnic Indian rubber plantation worker, filed the suit last Thursday asking the High Court in central Selangor state to order the state's Islamic Department to produce his family in court so they can be freed.

Officials detained Marimuthu's wife, Raimah Bibi Noordin, also an ethnic Indian, and five of their six children on April 2 and sent them to a Malay Muslim village for religious rehabilitation after deciding she was a Muslim and her marriage to a Hindu was illegal.

The court scheduled a hearing for May 3, one of the earliest possible dates, said Ram Karpal Singh, one of Marimuthu's lawyers. Malaysia has three public holidays over the next week.

Marimuthu "is very anxious to have this resolved as soon as possible," Singh said.

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Under Malaysia's Islamic laws, anyone who wants to marry a Muslim must convert to Islam, and anyone born into a Muslim family is unable to legally convert.

Marimuthu's case is the latest in a series of conflicts involving the religious rights of minority groups. Activists say the disputes have strained ethnic relations in the multicultural nation, which has enjoyed racial peace for nearly four decades.

Marimuthu has said his wife was adopted by an Indian Muslim family when she was young, but that she is a practicing Hindu. Her old identity card said she was an Indian Hindu, but the government listed her as a Muslim after she applied for a new identity card earlier this year, he said.

Marimuthu's eldest son wasn't detained by officials because he wasn't at home at the time when the rest of the family was taken, he has said.

Authorities probably learned about Raimah's religious status when the couple enrolled their children in school and copies of her new identity card were submitted to the Education Department, Marimuthu's lawyers have said.

Muslims, who account for nearly 60 percent of Malaysia's 26 million people, are governed by Shariah laws in family and personal matters. Ethnic Chinese, Indian and other races come under civil courts.