Human rights NGO Suaram slammed academician Ridhuan Tee today for
saying that human rights will undermine Islam, accusing him of
attempting to derail the growing support for human rights among
Malaysians.
"The
current positioning is an attempt to further launch the country into
the dark ages of authoritarianism and iron fist rule, and to
re-establish the culture of fear that have undermined our democratic
practices and public participation in Malaysia," Suaram programme
manager E Nalini (right) said.
She noted that Tee's comments were in support of recent statements by
former inspector-general of police Abdul Rahim Mohd Noor and former
prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad, both of whom "are known proponents
against human rights".
Tee, who is a Universiti Pertahanan Nasional Malaysia (UPNM) lecturer, had in a Sinar Harian column yesterday said human rights was used as a platform by some to destroy and erode the sanctity of Islam.
Describing the comment as incorrect and misleading, Nalini said the
fundamental principles of Islam in fact support human rights in the form
of social justice and fundamental freedom.
“Ridhuan Tee is reminded that the key events in the history of Islam as
in the freedom of Bilal who was a slave and the Hijrah of the prophet
from Mecca to Medina shall, in today’s context, be understood as freedom
from slavery and rights to seek refuge.”
Last week, Rahim had warned of a “human rights wave” akin to the rise of communism in the past that would threaten the country’s social contract.
This was later backed by Mahathir, who said human rights had been exploited for political expediency.
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