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Saturday, August 17, 2019

WILL ZAKIR NAIK’S DAY OF RECKONING COME? AFTER 5-HOUR GRILLING, COPS STAY MUM – BUT EX ENVOY BLAMED BY ZAKIR FOR ‘TWISTING’ HIS WORDS STANDS FIRM ‘ZAKIR IS A DIVISIVE FIGURE & MUST BE DEPORTED’

KUALA LUMPUR— Controversial televangelist Dr Zakir Naik spent around five hours today recording his statements with federal police after he was summoned to Bukit Aman over his statements during an event in Kelantan last weekend.
The preacher, said to have arrived at the police headquarters at around 3pm, was seen leaving in a black Toyota Innova MPV at 8.15pm.
Dr Zakir, dressed in a white shirt with his customary white “kopiah” or skullcap, left without addressing the horde of media personnel standing by outside the headquarters in anticipation of his departure.
It is understood that Dr Zakir had his statements taken by investigators from Bukit Aman’s Prosecution/Law division (D5).
Hugely popular among conservative Muslim Malaysians, the Islamic preacher has drawn flak from the minority ethnic Indians and Chinese for his inflammatory remarks against them and their religious beliefs during the event.
There, Dr Zakir was reported by news portal Malaysiakini to have claimed Indian Malaysians were more loyal to the Narendra Modi government of India than the Mahathir administration.
The Mumbai-born was also reported to have called Chinese Malaysians “old guests” who should go back to their ancestral lands before he should be made to leave the country.
Earlier today, Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad said that Dr Zakir’s Permanent Residency status could be revoked by Putrajaya should it be proven that his actions have harmed the country’s well-being.
Dr Mahathir had said the government would first wait for the result of the police investigation into the fugitive preacher’s alleged inflammatory remarks against minorities in this country, before deciding the next course of action.
Previously, the Warisan-led Sabah government has said it would ban entry to Dr Zakir if he continued to make incendiary religious speeches.
In a statement last night, Home Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin issued a warning that action will be taken against anyone who disrupts Malaysia’s harmony and public order, whether they are citizens or not.

Dr Zakir Naik ‘divisive’, no apologies for seeking his removal, says ex-envoy

KUALA LUMPUR ― India-born fugitive Dr Zakir Naik has been a “divisive” figure and needs to be removed from Malaysia, former Malaysian ambassador Datuk Dennis Ignatius said today.
Dennis pointed out that he has long stood by his view of Dr Zakir being divisive, after the televangelist lodged a police report against him and four others for purportedly defaming the latter.
“I consider Zakir Naik’s speeches and statements, going back a few years now, to be disruptive and divisive and have said so. And on that basis, I have also joined with others in urging the government of Malaysia to deport him. I cannot apologise for that,” the former diplomat told Malay Mail when contacted for comments on Dr Zakir’s police report.
“Even the prime minister was recently quoted as saying, “We will need to take action to prevent him from making such speeches, which pit the races against each other. Sarawak has also reiterated its entry ban on him for the same reasons. I am not sure if he plans to file police reports against them all as well,” he said.
“Of course, as a citizen, I will fully cooperate with any police investigation should there be one,” he added.
Dennis was one of five individuals singled out by Dr Zakir in his police report earlier today in Shah Alam.
The four others named by Dr Zakir are minister M. Kulasegaran, Penang Deputy Chief Minister II P. Ramasamy, Bagan Dalam assemblyman Satees Muniandy and Klang MP Charles Santiago.
Kulasegaran is currently in Japan on a work visit until August 19, while the rest have indicated readiness to assist the police if investigations are conducted over Dr Zakir’s report.
Satees had even remarked that he would not be running away to another country or “play victim” and would face the law in his home country “unlike the person who lodged the report”, alluding to Dr Zakir, who has resisted returning to India to face money-laundering charges there.
In his police report earlier today, Dr Zakir police that the five had allegedly made defamatory statements against him through social media or websites after his August 8 speech in Kota Baru, Kelantan, and listed the links to these alleged remarks.
Dr Zakir claimed that the five had wrongly quoted his August 8 remarks out of context, accusing them of twisting and manipulating his comments to accuse him of creating communal disharmony.
Dr Zakir said he was lodging the report to enable the police to launch an investigation against the five under laws such as the Penal Code and Sedition Act for allegedly defaming him and for purportedly “instigating racial disharmony and hatred among the citizens of Malaysia”.
Dr Zakir’s police report today comes amid criticism over his alleged controversial remarks about Malaysia’s minority communities, with the police yesterday confirming a total of 115 police reports lodged nationwide in relation to his case.
Yesterday, the police confirmed that an investigation against Dr Zakir has been launched under Section 504 of the Penal Code for intentional insult with intent to provoke a breach of the peace.
MALAY MAIL

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