Source: Awramba Times
ADDIS ABABA — Security was tightened in the Capital Addis Ababa.
Defying government threats, Ethiopian Muslim have vowed to continue
their protests against the “Ahbashism Campaign” instigated by the
government and “Majlis”.
“Call me a terrorist but I will defend my religion,” a muezzin in a
mosque at the outskirts of Addis Ababa said in his sermon, denouncing
the Al Ahbash movement, Reuters reported.ver the past few weeks, Muslim protests have been causing concern in
the predominantly Christian nation that takes pride in centuries of
coexistence.
Thousands of Muslims have protested against the government’s oppression of their community, accusing it of spearheading a campaign in collaboration with the Majlis to indoctrinate Muslims with the ideology of a sect called “Ahbash”.Protesters were further infuriated when Ethiopian police shot dead seven Muslims in Assasa town in Arsi province of Oromiya regional state two weeks ago.
Thousands of Muslims have protested against the government’s oppression of their community, accusing it of spearheading a campaign in collaboration with the Majlis to indoctrinate Muslims with the ideology of a sect called “Ahbash”.Protesters were further infuriated when Ethiopian police shot dead seven Muslims in Assasa town in Arsi province of Oromiya regional state two weeks ago.
Witnesses say the Muslim victims fell when Ethiopian security forces
surrounded a mosque to arrest Sheikh Su’ud Aman on accusations of
prompting “terrorist” ideology. Scores of people were also reportedly injured in the incident. Observers said the brutal killing of innocent people in Assasa town
has fueled tension between the government and the Muslim community.
Muslims say the government is spearheading a campaign in
collaboration with the Supreme Council of Islamic Affairs to
indoctrinate their community with the ideology of a sect called
“Ahbash”. The government of Ethiopian Premier Meles Zenawi has put the Ahbash in charge of the religious affairs of Ethiopia’s Muslims. Muslims say the government move is in violation of the constitution,
which prevents the government interference in religious affairs.
Muslims also accuse the Ahbash of launching an “indoctrination
program” in predominantly Muslim areas, forcing people to attend
“religious training” camps or risk police interrogation and possible
arrest. Founded by Ethiopian-Lebanese scholar Sheikh Abdullah al-Harari,
Ahbash is seen by the West as a “friendly alternative” to Wahabi
ideology, which the West sees as extreme and militant. Muslims say Ahbash imams are being brought over from Lebanon to fill
the Majlis and teach Ethiopians that “Wahabis” are non-Muslims.
Interference
Ethiopian Muslim activists confirmed that protesters reject any
government interference or trial to impose Ahbashism ideology on their
society. “It (Al Ahbash) has the right to exist in Ethiopia, but it is
unacceptable that the Council tries to impose it on all members of the
Muslim community,” Abubeker Ahmed, an Ethiopian Muslim activist and head
of an independent Islamic arbitration committee, told Reuters.
He said the government wanted to prevent a vote to elect a new council and replace the decade-old one.
He added that the appointed leadership of Ethiopia’s Islamic Affairs
Supreme Council was not representative of the country’s Muslim
community. “They (the government) want to keep them because they agree to whatever orders,” he said.
Rejecting the government claims that hardline Islam was taking root
in the Horn of Africa country, some protesters say the government’s
strategy might backfire, sowing the seeds of the hardline Islam it seeks
to keep at bay. “We are against any sort of extremism ourselves,” said Ahmed Mustafa, secretary of the independent arbitration panel. “We want to stop such thinking.” Ethiopia, Africa’s second most populous country, is home to 60
percent Christian and about 34 percent Muslim, according to CIA
factbook.
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