< Religion News - 1 >
Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi has criticised a proposal by
nationalist monks to restrict marriages between Buddhist women and men of other
faiths, describing it as a violation of human rights, a report said Friday.
YANGON: Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi has criticised a
proposal by nationalist monks to restrict marriages between Buddhist women and
men of other faiths, describing it as a violation of human rights, a report
said Friday.
"This is one-sided. Why only women? You cannot treat the women
unfairly," Radio Free Asia quoted the Nobel Peace Laureate as saying in an
interview.
"I also understand that this is not in accordance with the laws of the
country and especially that it is not part of Buddhism," the veteran
activist said.
"It is a violation of women's rights and human rights."
Under the proposal -- spearheaded by the controversial Mandalay cleric
Wirathu -- non-Buddhist men wishing to marry a Buddhist woman would have to
convert and gain permission from her parents to wed or risk 10 years in jail.
The idea was raised at a recent meeting of more than 200 monks called to
discuss a surge in Buddhist-Muslim violence in the former junta-ruled country.
Wirathu said the law was needed "because Buddhist girls have lost
freedom of religion when they married Muslim men".
Senior clerics have distanced themselves from the proposal while women's
rights groups have voiced opposition.
Sectarian bloodshed -- mostly targeting Muslims -- has laid bare deep
divides that were largely suppressed under decades of military rule which ended
two years ago in the Buddhist-majority country.
Radical monks -- once at the forefront of the country's pro-democracy
movement -- have led a campaign to shun shops owned by Muslims and only to
visit stores run by Buddhists. Some were also involved in the religious unrest.
Suu Kyi has been accused by some international human rights activists of
failing to clearly condemn the anti-Muslim violence.
Dozens of people were killed in clashes in central Myanmar in March while
about 200 people died last year in sectarian unrest in the western state of
Rakhine.Last month Suu Kyi criticised a controversial ban imposed on Rohingya
Muslims in Rakhine having more than two children.- AFP/sb
People have freedom of religion, so no one
can unduly oppress to others’ religion through marriage. However, if we achieve
the unification of religion, we do not have to fight and harm each other. Thus,
the unification of religion is urgent problem.
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