Human rights activists condemn crackdown though
officials in largely Catholic nation insist reports of ban are exaggerated
Aristides
Cabeche and David Smith in Johannesburg
theguardian.com
Angola accused of 'banning'
Islam as mosques closed
Aristides Cabeche and David Smith in
Johannesburg
Palestinians burn Angola's flag in a protest amid
reports that the country has banned Islam and destroyed mosques. Photograph:
APA/REX
Angola has been accused of
"banning" Islam after shutting down most of
the country's mosques amid reports of violence and intimidation against women
who wear the veil.
The Islamic Community of Angola (ICA) claims that
eight mosques have been destroyed in the past two years and anyone who
practises Islam risks being found guilty of disobeying Angola's penal code.
Human rights activists have
condemned the wide-ranging crackdown. "From what I have heard, Angola is
the first country in the world that has decided to ban Islam," said Elias
Isaac, country director of the Open Society
Initiative of Southern Africa (Osisa). "This is a crazy madness. The
government is intolerant of any difference."
Officials in the largely Catholic southern African
nation insist that worldwide media reports of a "ban" on Islam are exaggerated and no
places of worship are being targeted.
The UK has just named Angola as one of its five "high-level prosperity partners" in Africa and the two countries have
a burgeoning trade relationship. The Angolan president, José Eduardo dos
Santos, Africa's second-longest serving head of state at 34 years, has long been accused of corruption and human rights abuses.
Religious organisations are required to apply for
legal recognition in Angola, which currently sanctions 83, all of them
Christian. Last month the justice ministry rejected the applications of 194
organisations, including one from the Islamic community.
Under Angolan law, a religious group needs more than
100,000 members and to be present in 12 of the 18 provinces to gain legal
status, giving them the right to construct schools and places of worship. There
are only an estimated 90,000 Muslims among Angola's population of about 18
million.
David Já, president of the Islamic Community of Angola
(ICA), said on Thursday: "We can say that Islam has been banned in Angola.
You need 100,000 to be recognised as a religion or officially you
cannot pray."
There are 78 mosques in the country, according to the
ICA, and all have been closed except those in the capital, Luanda, because they
are technically unlicensed. "The mosques in Luanda were supposed to be
closed yesterday but because of an international
furore about reports that Angola had banned Islam, the government decided
not to," Já said.
"So, at the moment, mosques in Luanda are open
and people are going for prayers."
Já said the government began shutting mosques in 2010,
including one that was burned down in Huambo province, "a day after
authorities had warned us that we should have not built the mosque where we had
and that it had to be built somewhere else. The government justified by saying
that it was an invasion of Angolan culture and a threat to Christian
values."
Another mosque was destroyed in Luanda earlier this
month, Já said, and 120 copies of the Koran burned.
Muslims have been instructed to dismantle mosques themselves,
he added. "They usually issue a legal request for us to destroy the
building and give us 73 hours to do so. Failure to do so results in government
authorities doing it themselves."
Women who wear the traditional veil are also being
targeted, Já said. "As things stand, most Muslim women are afraid to wear
the veil. A woman was assaulted in hospital in Luanda for wearing a veil, and
on another occasion, a young Muslim lady was beaten up and told to leave the
country because she was wearing a veil.
"Most recently, young girls were prohibited from
wearing the veil in Catholic schools and, when we went there to confront the
nuns, they simply said they couldn't allow it. Although there is not an
explicit written law prohibiting the use of veil in Angola, government has
prohibited the practice of the faith and women are afraid to express their
faith in that sense."
The ICA's complaints were supported by Rafael Marques de Morais, a political activist and leading
investigative journalist in Angola. "I've seen an order that says
Muslims must destroy the mosques themselves and clear away the debris, or they
will be charged for the cost of the destruction."
He suggested the government was seeking to find a
convenient diversion from growing public hostility towards Chinese and
Portuguese workers in Angola. "The government need to deflect attention.
They are trying to find a scapegoat for economic pressures and saying Islam is
not common to Angolan values and culture.
"They believe a blanket law against Islam will
get the sympathy of both Angolans and those in the international community who
equate Islam with terrorism."
Asked about the potential for Muslims to protest,
Marques replied: "If the Muslims try to show any anger, they will be
deported the following day."
But the Angolan government denies any attempt to ban
Islam. "There is no war in Angola against Islam or any other
religion," Manuel Fernando, director of religious affairs at the culture
ministry, . "There is no official position that targets the destruction or
closure of places of worship, whichever they are."
A statement from the Angolan embassy in the US
concurred: "The republic of Angola ... it's a country that does not
interfere in religion. We have a lot of religions there. It is freedom of religion.
We have Catholic, Protestants, Baptists, Muslims and evangelical people."
Image: Palestinians burn Angola's flag in a
protest amid reports that the country has banned Islam and destroyed mosques.
Photograph: APA/REX
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