paladisious
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onislam.net wrote:Angola Bans Islam, Destroys MosqueSunday, 24 November 2013 00:00 Last October, Muslims from the urban municipality of Viana, Luanda, attended the destruction of the minaret of their mosque Zengo.LUANDA – According to several Angolan newspapers, Angola has become the first country in the world to ban Islam and Muslims, taking first measures by destroying mosques in the country. “The process of legalization of Islam has not been approved by the Ministry of Justice and Human Rights, their mosques would be closed until further notice,” Rosa Cruz e Silva, the Angolan Minister of Culture, was quoted by Agence Ecofin on Friday, November 22. Silva comments were given during her visit last Tuesday to the 6th Commission of the National Assembly. She asserted that the decision was the latest is a series of efforts to ban ‘illegal’ religious sects. According to the minister, the action was necessary to fight relentlessly against the emergence of congregations whose worshipping is contradicting with the customs of the Angolan culture. Same as Islam, other faiths which were not legalized will face closure of their houses of worship. “All sects on the list published by the Ministry of Justice and Human Rights in the Angolan newspaper ‘Jornal de Angola’ are prohibited to conduct worship, so they should keep their doors closed," she was quoted by Cameroon Voice. "In addition, we also have a long list of more than a thousand legalization applications,” she added. The anti-Islam comments were not the first by Angolan officials. “This is the final end of Islamic influence in our country,” President José Eduardo dos Santos was quoted by Osun Defender newspaper on Sunday, November 24. Last October, Muslims from the urban municipality of Viana, Luanda, attended the destruction of the minaret of their mosque Zengo. The provincial governor of Luanda, Bento Bento, has also said on the airwaves of a local radio that "radical Muslims are not welcome in Angola and the Angolan government is not ready for the legalization of mosques." He added that Muslims were not welcome in Angola and that the government would not legalize the presence of mosques in the country. According to CIA Factbook, 47% of Angolans practice indigenous beliefs, 38% Roman Catholic and 15% Protestant. Islam’s opinion about freedom of religion is evident from the Qur’an, which says what means: *{Say, ‘The truth is from your Lord’: Let him who will, believe, and let him who will, reject [it]}* (An-Nisaa' 4:29) Again, God says: *{Let there be no compulsion in religion: Truth stands out clear from Error…}* (Al-Baqarah 2:256)
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Glory Recruit
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:shock: wtf
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paladisious
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This will end well.
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sydneyfc1987
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Nice knowing you Angola. See ya!
(VAR) IS NAVY BLUE
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macktheknife
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Guess if it's good enough for Saudi Arabia...
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Decazz
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sigh
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paulbagzFC
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 -PB
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433
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I'm sure a well measured and reasonable response from the Muslim community is incoming.
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paulbagzFC
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433 wrote:I'm sure a well measured and reasonable response from the Muslim community is incoming. And I bet it won't take into account the views/laws of the governing country rofl. -PB
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Davstar
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paulbagzFC wrote:433 wrote:I'm sure a well measured and reasonable response from the Muslim community is incoming. And I bet it won't take into account the views/laws of the governing country rofl. -PB This.
these Kangaroos can play football - Ange P. (Intercontinental WC Play-offs 2017)
KEEP POLITICS OUT OF FOOTBALL
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zimbos_05
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433 wrote:I'm sure a well measured and reasonable response from the Muslim community is incoming. My biggest fear. I can sense massive overreaction and idiotic retaliation.
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zimbos_05
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I'm interested to know what other religions are on the illegal list.
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Eastern Glory
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Well shit...
This is a sad day for humanity.
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TheSelectFew
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Next, eliminate christians, jews and whatever dumb shit humans have used to justify their bullshit. Governments too.
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afromanGT
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Eastern Glory wrote:Well shit...
This is a sad day for humanity. This. For two reasons: 1) Each and every person on this planet should be afforded their own religious freedoms, free from persecution. 2) This will no doubt result in an angry and violent response from the extremes of the belief.
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zimbos_05
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afromanGT wrote:1) Each and every person on this planet should be afforded their own religious freedoms, free from persecution. 2) This will no doubt result in an angry and violent response from the extremes of the belief. 1) Its done by the ministry for Justice and Human Rights. Clearly they have thoughts this through. 2) This is seriously my biggest fear. There is a real chance that shit could get crazy once the extremes hear of this. Angolan ambassadors probably best to flee the extreme countries.
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433
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zimbos_05 wrote:afromanGT wrote:1) Each and every person on this planet should be afforded their own religious freedoms, free from persecution. 2) This will no doubt result in an angry and violent response from the extremes of the belief. 1) Its done by the ministry for Justice and Human Rights.Clearly they have thoughts this through. 2) This is seriously my biggest fear. There is a real chance that shit could get crazy once the extremes hear of this. Angolan ambassadors probably best to flee the extreme countries. Do they even exist? :lol: Edited by 433: 25/11/2013 09:24:41 PM
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zimbos_05
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433 wrote:zimbos_05 wrote:afromanGT wrote:1) Each and every person on this planet should be afforded their own religious freedoms, free from persecution. 2) This will no doubt result in an angry and violent response from the extremes of the belief. 1) Its done by the ministry for Justice and Human Rights.Clearly they have thoughts this through. 2) This is seriously my biggest fear. There is a real chance that shit could get crazy once the extremes hear of this. Angolan ambassadors probably best to flee the extreme countries. Do they even exist? :lol: Edited by 433: 25/11/2013 09:24:41 PM Good question. If they ban the religion they probably wouldn't even have ambassadors in Muslim countries.
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paladisious
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433 wrote:zimbos_05 wrote:afromanGT wrote:1) Each and every person on this planet should be afforded their own religious freedoms, free from persecution. 2) This will no doubt result in an angry and violent response from the extremes of the belief. 1) Its done by the ministry for Justice and Human Rights.Clearly they have thoughts this through. 2) This is seriously my biggest fear. There is a real chance that shit could get crazy once the extremes hear of this. Angolan ambassadors probably best to flee the extreme countries. Do they even exist? :lol: About 50 of them, apparently. And yep Zim, Ministry for Justice and Human Rights indeed! I thought of you when posting this, very sad situation.
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paladisious
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zimbos_05 wrote:433 wrote:zimbos_05 wrote:afromanGT wrote:1) Each and every person on this planet should be afforded their own religious freedoms, free from persecution. 2) This will no doubt result in an angry and violent response from the extremes of the belief. 1) Its done by the ministry for Justice and Human Rights.Clearly they have thoughts this through. 2) This is seriously my biggest fear. There is a real chance that shit could get crazy once the extremes hear of this. Angolan ambassadors probably best to flee the extreme countries. Do they even exist? :lol: Edited by 433: 25/11/2013 09:24:41 PM Good question. If they ban the religion they probably wouldn't even have ambassadors in Muslim countries. Algeria, Egypt, Morocco, Turkey and the UAE.
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Glory Recruit
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So Zimbabwe orders foreign shop owners to shut its doors for locals, Angola bans Islam, all in a week.
How many nations in the world have banned a religion?
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paladisious
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Iridium1010 wrote:So Zimbabwe orders foreign shop owners to shut its doors for locals, Angola bans Islam, all in a week.
How many nations in the world have banned a religion?
Probably lots, but in modern times I'd think you'd find the entire list of current countries being East of Turkey and West of India.
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433
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Not enough.
inb4fedora
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afromanGT
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Iridium1010 wrote:How many nations in the world have banned a religion?
I'd assume Christianity is banned in more than a few islamic nations?
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MVFCSouthEnder
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I'll give it about a week until either Al-Qaeda, Al-Shaabab or Boko Haram does something.
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paladisious
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MVFCSouthEnder wrote:I'll give it about a week until either Al-Qaeda, Al-Shaabab or Boko Haram does something. Only two percent of Angolans follow Haram anyway.
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MVFCSouthEnder
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paladisious wrote:MVFCSouthEnder wrote:I'll give it about a week until either Al-Qaeda, Al-Shaabab or Boko Haram does something. Only two percent of Angolans follow Haram anyway. Well that's good then. I guess the thing Angola have going for them on the African terrorism front is the fact that they're well away from Somalia and the Sahara/Maghreb. Hopefully if they do anything it's just a public denouncement and not an actual attack.
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afromanGT
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paladisious wrote:MVFCSouthEnder wrote:I'll give it about a week until either Al-Qaeda, Al-Shaabab or Boko Haram does something. Only two percent of Angolans follow Haram anyway. That's still over 300,000 people who could make a lot of noise.
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notorganic
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paladisious wrote:MVFCSouthEnder wrote:I'll give it about a week until either Al-Qaeda, Al-Shaabab or Boko Haram does something. Only two percent of Angolans follow Haram anyway.
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MVFCSouthEnder
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RedKat wrote:afromanGT wrote:Iridium1010 wrote:How many nations in the world have banned a religion?
I'd assume Christianity is banned in more than a few islamic nations? Judaism in islamic places? May not be completely banned but not exactly welcoming. Somalia and Syria just to name a couple have banned Israelis from entering their territories, so that would go some way to banning Judaism.
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