An Islamic religious authority raided the Bible Society
 of Malaysia on Thursday and confiscated dozens of Bibles in the Malay 
and Iban languages because they contained the word “Allah,” which 
Muslims argue is exclusive to Islam.
The move sparked outrage among the minority Christian community.
The
 newly-appointed director of the Selangor state Islamic Religious 
Department, Ahmad Zaharin Mohamed Saad, said recently he wanted churches
 to obey a law that bans non-Muslims from using 35 Arabic words and 
phrases including “Allah”, “nabi” (prophet) and “injil” (gospel).
In Malaysia, proselytising to a Muslim is a criminal offence.
A
 team of officers from the religious department, aided by the police, 
seized 320 copies of the Bible and detained the society’s president Lee 
Min Choon and manager Sinclair Wong.
Both Lee and Wong were released later on police bail.
Speaking
 to reporters outside the police station, Lee called for calm and said 
he would hold talks with the department’s senior officers next week.
He
 said the society had previously received assurances from the government
 that Malay-language Bibles could be imported from Indonesia.
“We are allowed to freely distribute the Bibles in Sabah and Sarawak without any conditions,” he said.
As
 for distribution in West Malaysia, he added, “As long as the Bible has a
 cross and the words ‘Christian publication’ on the cover, it can be 
freely imported and distributed to Christians.” The Council of Churches 
Malaysia (CCM) expressed alarm over the raid.
“CCM 
believes the Islamic authorities do not have the authority in law to 
enter the premises of non-Muslim religious establishments for 
inspection, search or raid,” its general-secretary Hermen Shastri said 
in a statement.
He urged Prime Minister Najib Abdul 
Razak and the Selangor state Chief Minister Khalid Ibrahim to intervene 
and stop further raids.
Christians comprise some 10 
per cent of the country’s population of 29 million. The religion is 
practised mainly by the minority ethnic Chinese, Indians and the 
indigenous tribes in Sabah and Sarawak in Borneo. The Malay-language 
Bibles are widely used by Christians in Borneo while Iban is the largest
 ethnic group in Sarawak.
The tussle over the use of 
the word “Allah” by Christians led to several churches being torched and
 stoned in 2010 following a court ruling allowing the Christians the 
right to use the word. That ruling has since been overturned by a higher
 court. 
 
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