Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
India

Won't Easily Give In To India's Demand For Deporting Zakir Naik

Darpan News Desk IANS, 10 Jul, 2018 12:17 PM
    Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad said on Tuesday his government would not give in easily to India’s demand to deport the controversial Muslim preacher Zakir Naik for alleged terror activities and money laundering, according to a media report.
     
     
    Three days after meeting Naik, wanted in India for alleged terror activities and money laundering, the Malaysian prime minister said his government would always ensure it looked into all factors before responding to any demand, the New Straits Times reported.
     
     
    “We do not easily follow the demands of others. We must look at all factors before we respond,” Mahathir said in his first public remarks since on Naik since he met the firebrand cleric on Saturday.
     
     
    “Otherwise, someone will become a victim,” the Malaysian Prime Minister said.
     
     
    Responding to questions on Naik, who is has permanent resident status in Malaysia, and India’s request to have him extradited, Mahathir said his government would always ensure it looked into all factors before responding to any demand.
     
     
    Mahathir last week said the cleric would not be handed over to Indian authorities as he had been granted Malaysian permanent resident status.
     
     
     
     
    The prime minister said Zakir, who left India in 2016, would be allowed to stay in the country as long as he was not creating any problem.
     
     
    However, the decision did not sit well with several groups, who insisted the government return Zakir to India following his alleged tendecies to make racial and religiously insensitive statements, the report said.
     
     
    India had made a formal extradition request to Malaysia for Naik’s deportation after accusing him of inciting youngsters to commit terror activities through his hate speeches.
     
     
    A strategist of Malaysia’s ruling Parti Pribumi Bersatu Malaysia (PPBM) had also defended Prime Minister Mahathir’s decision not deport Naik to India, saying doing so would be akin to deporting Uighur Muslims to China.
     
     
    PPBM strategist Rais Hussin said he personally could see no wrong in Naik’s activities and speeches.
     
     
    Deporting him would be akin to deporting Uighur Muslims to China, he said, referring to China pressing Malaysia for the extradition of 11 Uighur men who entered Malaysia illegally last year after their dramatic escape from a jail in Thailand last year.
     
     
     
    Zakir has also accused the media in India of subjecting him to a campaign of vilification over the past two years.
     
     
    He has also pledged to expose fake news about him soon.
     
     
    Naik is being probed under terror and money laundering charges by the National Investigation Agency (NIA).
     
     
    The NIA had first registered a case against Naik under anti-terror laws in 2016 for allegedly promoting enmity between different religious groups.
     
     
    Naik is also under investigation for issuing alleged hate speeches that inspired a deadly terror attack on a popular cafe in Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh in 2016.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Drug Issue Is Back, And Now Haunts Congress In Punjab

    Drug Issue Is Back, And Now Haunts Congress In Punjab
    With over 30 deaths linked to drug abuse being reported in June from different parts of Punjab, Chief Minister Amarinder Singh is facing an onslaught from the opposition Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) and the Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) for his government's failure to curb the menace.

    Drug Issue Is Back, And Now Haunts Congress In Punjab

    In Punjab Villages, Youth Take On Addicts, Peddlers, Form Groups, Share Info With Cops

    In Punjab Villages, Youth Take On Addicts, Peddlers, Form Groups, Share Info With Cops
    Moved by images of a child hugging his father’s corpse, crying bitterly, residents of Dhotian village in Tarn Taran have declared a war on drugs — help or no help from the police. 

    In Punjab Villages, Youth Take On Addicts, Peddlers, Form Groups, Share Info With Cops

    Punjab Makes Dope Test Mandatory For Staff; Manish Tewari Dares Capt To Include Lawmakers As Well

    Punjab Makes Dope Test Mandatory For Staff; Manish Tewari Dares Capt To Include Lawmakers As Well
    Congress leader Manish Tewari has dared the Punjab government to make dope test mandatory for MLAs and MPs from the state to remove the artificial distinction between the meaning of state government employees.

    Punjab Makes Dope Test Mandatory For Staff; Manish Tewari Dares Capt To Include Lawmakers As Well

    Ready To Undergo Dope Test But Won't Force Other MLAs, Says Punjab CM Amarinder Singh

    Ready To Undergo Dope Test But Won't Force Other MLAs, Says Punjab CM Amarinder Singh
    Capt Amarinder Singh on Thursday said he was willing to undergo dope test, but would leave it to the conscience of other elected representatives to take a decision on the same.

    Ready To Undergo Dope Test But Won't Force Other MLAs, Says Punjab CM Amarinder Singh

    Supreme Court Wants Shri Jagannath Temple To Be Opened To Non-Hindus

    Supreme Court Wants Shri Jagannath Temple To Be Opened To Non-Hindus
    Seeking to overturn centuries-old tradition of not allowing non-Hindus to enter Shri Jagannath Temple at Puri in Odisha, the Supreme Court on Thursday asked the temple management to consider opening it to everyone irrespective of his/her faith.

    Supreme Court Wants Shri Jagannath Temple To Be Opened To Non-Hindus

    It Is High Time 1984 Anti-Sikh Riot Cases Are Decided At Earliest: SC

    It Is High Time 1984 Anti-Sikh Riot Cases Are Decided At Earliest: SC
    As 1984 anti-Sikh riot cases in Delhi continue to hang fire even after 34 years, the Supreme Court on Wednesday said it was high time that these cases were decided.

    It Is High Time 1984 Anti-Sikh Riot Cases Are Decided At Earliest: SC