http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia-pacific/2010/01/20101106245977872.html

Sunday, January 10, 2010 
14:42 Mecca time, 11:42 GMT 


      Churches firebombed in Malaysia 
     
     
           
      Two more churches and a Catholic convent school in Malaysia have been 
targeted by arsonists, amid a row over the use of the word "Allah" by 
non-Muslims.

      Police said there were no reports of injuries in Sunday's incidents, 
which brought the total number of churches attacked since Friday to six.

      Molotov cocktails were hurled at the All Saints church and the school in 
Taiping in Perak state.

      "There were black marks on the wall [of All Saints]. We believed there 
was a small fire earlier but there was no damage as the wall was intact," 
Zulkifli Abdullah, the state police chief, said.

      He said a broken bottle filled with the inflammable liquid paraffin was 
found inside the compound of St Louis Catholic Church.

      Muslims protesting

      Muslim groups have staged protests in response to a court ruling last 
week that gave a Catholic newspaper the Herald the right to print the Arabic 
word for God, Allah, following a long-running dispute with the government over 
the issue.

      Thousands of Malaysian Christians turned up to Sunday services, despite 
the recent tensions.

      Four churches in the Kuala Lumpur area have been hit by firebombs since 
Friday, leaving one badly damaged with its ground floor gutted, and prompting 
Najib Razak, the prime minister, to promise to crack down on race crime.

      Hermen Shastri, secretary-general of the Council of Churches, said 
officials had stepped up security in the wake of the attacks.

      "The attacks show they are more just a prank as it does not appear to be 
a major [attack], someone is trying to send a signal that they are unhappy," he 
said.

      The word Allah has been used by Malay-speaking Christians for centuries, 
as well as by Christians in Arabic-speaking countries and in Indonesia.

      Rev Lawrence Andrew, editor of the Herald, has said there is no other 
appropriate term for God in Malay.

      About 10 per cent of Malaysians are Christians, including about 850,000 
Catholics. Around 60 per cent of the population are Muslims.
     

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