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SMS SENDER IDENTIFIED
By Mazni Mustafa
IPOH: Perak Mufti Datuk Seri Harussani Zakaria has named a woman in her 40s as the originator of the text message that claimed a group of Muslims was going to be baptised at a church here last month.
He claimed the woman os a graduate of the International Islamic University, who later studied at Al-Azhar University in Cairo.
"Upon, her return, she joined a missionary group that carried out social work. She later converted to Christianity and now claims to have returned to Islam." he told reporters at his home in Kampung Melayu Gunung Rapat here yesterday.
Harussani said he had an audience with the Sultan of Perak, Sultan Azlan Shah, to explain his stand on the issue.
"The Sultan is happy and satisfied with my explanation,"he said of his 9am meeting with the Ruler.
The SMS, which was widely circulated last week, had alleged that National Mariner Datuk Azhar Mansor would led a ceremony to baptise a group of students at the Church of Our Lady of Lourdes in Silibin here on Nov 5.
It was later found that the supposed baptism was an event to mark the first Holy Communion for about 100 Catholic children.
Harussani said the woman had sent him an SMS message on Oct 21 to give the time and the place of the alleged baptism. He asked her to meet him at his house.
"She came with her husband a day before Hari Raya (Eid)," he said, adding that she brought along compact discs and documents that purportedly disclosed that Azhar would be at the Church to baptise the Malay students.
Harussani claimed that he handed all the information to the police and the Special Branch to investigate.
He said he raised his concerns over the allegations with representatives of Muslim non-governmental organisations at the state mosque here on Nov 2.
"What I revealed was meant to stay within the confines of the meeting. I did not know that those present would pass the word around.
"It was never my intention to create chaos. As the Mufti (Muslim scholar who interprets Islamic Laws), I have the responsibility to remind Muslims of the threats facing Islam today," he said.
"I heard about the commotion at the church while I was in Syria. I am saddened and disappointed by the turn of events.
"I was only carrying out my duty as Mufti to inform the necessary people of supposed baptism," he said, stressing that he had not spread the SMS or told people to protest.
Asked about the anxiety and tension the SMS has stirred, Harussani said: "What they did (circulating it) was wrong. Why didn't they leave it to the police to investigate?"
Harussani said he gave his statement to the police on Saturday during a four-hour meeting with state police chief Deputy Comm Datuk Aziz Bulat and Special Branch chief Senior Asst Comm (II) Dr. Ab Rahman Ismail at his house.
When contacted, Inspector General of Police Tan Sri Musa Hassan said police would investigate the Mufti's statement.
"We will act accordingly," he added.
source: The Star, 13.11.2006, Front Page.
By Mazni Mustafa
IPOH: Perak Mufti Datuk Seri Harussani Zakaria has named a woman in her 40s as the originator of the text message that claimed a group of Muslims was going to be baptised at a church here last month.
He claimed the woman os a graduate of the International Islamic University, who later studied at Al-Azhar University in Cairo.
"Upon, her return, she joined a missionary group that carried out social work. She later converted to Christianity and now claims to have returned to Islam." he told reporters at his home in Kampung Melayu Gunung Rapat here yesterday.
Harussani said he had an audience with the Sultan of Perak, Sultan Azlan Shah, to explain his stand on the issue.
"The Sultan is happy and satisfied with my explanation,"he said of his 9am meeting with the Ruler.
The SMS, which was widely circulated last week, had alleged that National Mariner Datuk Azhar Mansor would led a ceremony to baptise a group of students at the Church of Our Lady of Lourdes in Silibin here on Nov 5.
It was later found that the supposed baptism was an event to mark the first Holy Communion for about 100 Catholic children.
Harussani said the woman had sent him an SMS message on Oct 21 to give the time and the place of the alleged baptism. He asked her to meet him at his house.
"She came with her husband a day before Hari Raya (Eid)," he said, adding that she brought along compact discs and documents that purportedly disclosed that Azhar would be at the Church to baptise the Malay students.
Harussani claimed that he handed all the information to the police and the Special Branch to investigate.
He said he raised his concerns over the allegations with representatives of Muslim non-governmental organisations at the state mosque here on Nov 2.
"What I revealed was meant to stay within the confines of the meeting. I did not know that those present would pass the word around.
"It was never my intention to create chaos. As the Mufti (Muslim scholar who interprets Islamic Laws), I have the responsibility to remind Muslims of the threats facing Islam today," he said.
"I heard about the commotion at the church while I was in Syria. I am saddened and disappointed by the turn of events.
"I was only carrying out my duty as Mufti to inform the necessary people of supposed baptism," he said, stressing that he had not spread the SMS or told people to protest.
Asked about the anxiety and tension the SMS has stirred, Harussani said: "What they did (circulating it) was wrong. Why didn't they leave it to the police to investigate?"
Harussani said he gave his statement to the police on Saturday during a four-hour meeting with state police chief Deputy Comm Datuk Aziz Bulat and Special Branch chief Senior Asst Comm (II) Dr. Ab Rahman Ismail at his house.
When contacted, Inspector General of Police Tan Sri Musa Hassan said police would investigate the Mufti's statement.
"We will act accordingly," he added.
source: The Star, 13.11.2006, Front Page.