Thursday, October 22, 2009

[Mkini] Bibles confiscated by Customs Dept

Bibles confiscated by Customs Dept
Fauwaz Abdul Aziz | Feb 4, 08 7:19pm

A seizure of English bibles by Customs Department officials has left
a bitter taste in the mouth of a Malaysian Christian and led the
Council of Churches Malaysia to decry the increasing incidence of
such acts by the authorities.

It comes on the heels of a spate of legal suits following similar
seizures of Christian materials by the authorities earlier this year
and late last year.

On Jan 28, missionary Juliana Nicholas returned from a trip to the
Philippines carrying with her two boxes containing 32 bibles meant
for her church group.

Upon arrival at the Low-Cost Carrier Terminal (LCCT) in Kuala Lumpur,
she was told to declare and open the contents of the boxes.

Having done so - and despite showing them a letter from her parish
priest stating the texts were for use by the church - Nicholas was
shocked to be hear subsequently that the bibles would be "referred"
to the Internal Security Ministry's Publications and Al-Quran Texts
Control Division.

Protestations that they could check the bibles there and then without
the inconvenience of referring them to the ministry fell on deaf
ears, said Nicholas.

"When I objected as these were English bibles, the ministry official
I spoke to said, 'Oh, we do this even with the Qurans that come
through this way'. But these are not Qurans, these are English
bibles!" Nicolas said when contacted.

As to when the bibles can be returned to her "would depend on those
people at the division", Nicholas said she was told further.

After a follow-up call today to the ministry, Nicholas said she was
informed she could now pick up the bibles from the division office
located near the airport.

Official apology needed

She insisted, however, that the ministry issue to her an official
apology for the inconvenience caused and a letter of assurance that
the incidence would not recur.

"They cannot allow such things to happen again. How can they do this
to you?" asked an indignant Nicholas.

Echoing her demand today, Council of Churches Malaysia general
secretary Dr Hermen Shastri said it should be known categorically
that "the bible is Holy Scripture for Christians."

"No authority on earth should deny Christians the right to possess,
read and travel with their bibles," he said in a statement.

"We call upon the prime minister, who is also the internal security
minister, to make a clear and unequivocal statement to assure
Christians in the country that they will not be subject to such
harassment and that their holy books will not be subject to the
scrutiny of the Control Division of Publications and Al-Quran Texts
of the Internal Security Ministry.

"For a country that has celebrated, cultivated and sustained 50 years
of religious freedom and harmonious living between all faith
communities, this latest episode is another example of how the
unilateral actions of certain government agencies are undermining the
government's stated claims of protecting religious freedom in the
country," said Shastri.

Legal suit

Earlier this year, the Internal Security Ministry confiscated English
language Christian children's books said to contain offensive
caricatures of prophets from several bookshops in three states.

Last year, a Sabah church filed a suit against the government and
Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi in his capacity as internal
security minister for not allowing the import of Christian literature
from Indonesia containing the word 'Allah'.

Sabah Sidang Injil Borneo (SIB) Church president Pastor Jerry Dusing
filed the suit on behalf of the church at the Kuala Lumpur High Court
on Dec 10 after six titles for their Sunday school education for
children were banned from being imported.

In 2006, about 1,000 copies of bibles in Bahasa Indonesia were seized
in Port Klang and had remained in Customs' possession.

Minister in the Prime Minister's Department Nazri Aziz had earlier
told Parliament that the government prohibited the distribution of
bibles in Bahasa Malaysia.

The prime minister however stated that Bahasa Malaysia bibles are not
banned but must be labeled with the words 'Not for Muslims'.

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