Jan 1, 09 1:08pm
A Catholic newspaper has been ordered by the government to cease its
Malay language edition until courts resolve a ban on the paper's use
of the word "Allah", its editor said today.
Herald newspaper editor Father Lawrence Andrew said the move was part
of a series of restrictions put in place by the government when it
renewed the paper's licence on Tuesday.
The Herald, circulated among the country's 850,000 Catholics, nearly
lost its publishing licence last year for using the word "Allah" as a
translation for "God", with authorities saying it should only be used
by Muslims.
"The constitution says Malay is the national language so why can't we
use the national language in Malaysia?" he told AFP.
He called the ban "unacceptable" and said he intended to take action.
Many Catholics are East M'sian bumis
Andrew (left in photo) said the ban did not make any sense because a
large proportion of Catholics in Malaysia are bumiputera who mainly
speak Malay.
The term "bumiputera", or "son of the soil", refers to ethnic Muslim
Malays and the indigenous inhabitants in peninsular Malaysia and on
Borneo island who are mostly Christian.
"More than 50 percent of our congregation are bumiputera and two of
our bishops are bumiputera," he added.
The issue will be decided by the courts next month, while Home
Ministry officials told the New Straits Times daily today they will be
monitoring the paper's actions closely.
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