Malaysia withdraws law on religious conversion
MALAYSIA has withdrawn an Islamic law which allows one parent to give consent for the religious conversion of a child, reports said yesterday, after an outcry that it discriminated against minorities.
The government has previously considered amending existing legislation so that children's conversion requires the consent of both parents.
Conversion is a sensitive issue in the Muslim-majority nation where members of minority faiths say they do not get a fair hearing under religious courts in custodial cases.
A 29-year-old Hindu woman recently claimed her estranged husband converted their children to Islam without her knowledge after embracing the religion last year. Under Sharia law, a non-Muslim parent cannot share custody of converted children.
Deputy Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin said the cabinet discussed the issues surrounding the status of a child's religion when the mother or father converts to Islam, reported the Star newspaper.
"We agreed that the bill's withdrawal was necessary to ensure that such cases were resolved in a fair manner to all," he said.
Public pressure prompted the government to withdraw the law, said Tian Chua, MP with People's Justice Party led by opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim.
"If the law had been pushed through, it would definitely cause tensions in society because the law seems to favor Muslims while other minorities would be denied justice," he said yesterday.
The now withdrawn law had come under fire from minority religious groups last week.
Interfaith group Malaysian Consultative Council of Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Sikhism and Taoism had said in a statement that the Federal Territories Bill - effective for the capital Kuala Lumpur - was unconstitutional and should be withdrawn.
The government has previously considered amending existing legislation so that children's conversion requires the consent of both parents.
Conversion is a sensitive issue in the Muslim-majority nation where members of minority faiths say they do not get a fair hearing under religious courts in custodial cases.
A 29-year-old Hindu woman recently claimed her estranged husband converted their children to Islam without her knowledge after embracing the religion last year. Under Sharia law, a non-Muslim parent cannot share custody of converted children.
Deputy Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin said the cabinet discussed the issues surrounding the status of a child's religion when the mother or father converts to Islam, reported the Star newspaper.
"We agreed that the bill's withdrawal was necessary to ensure that such cases were resolved in a fair manner to all," he said.
Public pressure prompted the government to withdraw the law, said Tian Chua, MP with People's Justice Party led by opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim.
"If the law had been pushed through, it would definitely cause tensions in society because the law seems to favor Muslims while other minorities would be denied justice," he said yesterday.
The now withdrawn law had come under fire from minority religious groups last week.
Interfaith group Malaysian Consultative Council of Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Sikhism and Taoism had said in a statement that the Federal Territories Bill - effective for the capital Kuala Lumpur - was unconstitutional and should be withdrawn.
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