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Angola Defends Barring Islamic Groups

15:57 - November 30, 2013
News ID: 1325620
Angolan Foreign Minister Georges Chikoti defended a decision barring some Islamic groups in the country.

Angola said on Friday it had refused registration to a number of Islamic religious groups and closed "illegal" mosques because they did not comply with national laws, but it denied any persecution of Muslims.

The government of the No.2 oil producer in Africa has faced a storm of criticism after some international media reported it had "banned Islam", causing embarrassment for this member of the OPEC oil cartel dominated by Muslim states.

The outcry followed an announcement by the Ministry of Justice earlier this month listing 194 "religious confessions" whose requests for registration it rejected, among them the Islamic Community of Angola (COIA).

Requests from a number of evangelical Christian and other non-Muslim groups were also turned down.

A COIA leader, David Ja, told Reuters the authorities had closed dozens of mosques and even demolished some across Angola's 18 provinces, in what he called a targeted crackdown in the predominantly Catholic former Portuguese colony.

In a briefing to diplomats on Friday, Foreign Minister Georges Chikoti said there had been "misunderstandings" about the government action.

"There has been no Muslim persecuted," Chikoti said.

"There is no government policy to persecute one church or religion, that was an interpretation made by the Islamic community in Angola," he said.

Chikoti said Angola's constitution defends the right to religious freedom, but the law requires religious groups to meet legal criteria to be recognized as official churches.

"There are eight Islamic denominations here, all of which requested registration. But none fulfilled legal requisites so they can't practice their faith until concluding the process."

He said some groups had not registered their mosques as official places of worship but did not go into further detail on what legal requirements they had not met.

Organizations need to have more than 100,000 adult members and have a presence in over two thirds of the country's territory to be considered legal entities.

Most of the estimated 18 million Angolans are Catholic, a legacy of Portuguese colonial rule which ended in 1975.

Ja said the around 900,000 Muslims in the country were feeling persecuted and called the government's argument over legal requirements "a subterfuge to ban Islam".

He said his organization had enough members and covered enough territory to quality for registration. "It is a way to ban a religion they think threatens Angolan culture," he added.

  

Source: World Bulletin

 

Tags: Angola ، islamic ، groups
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