How
refreshing and expectant to hear the outgoing head of the Organization for
Islamic Co-operation (OIC) declare this week that Muslim states should broaden
rights for minorities. After nine years as the president of an association that
carry together 57 Muslim nations, Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu is stepping down from
the post. Simultaneously, as emphasizing minority rights, he has also
highlighted that western countries should do more to fight prejudice against
Muslims there.
Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu |
The majority of prestigious example of his hard work was a visit to Myanmar last year to assess the harassment of the Rohingya Momins. Although an OIC delegation was finally allowed entry into the country where nearly 810,000 citizen Momins are immigrant facing violence, and death and discrimination, the organization was declined permission to set up a home office to assist them. Mr Ihsanoglu’s words have also highlighted the unstable position of Christians in some Momins countries. security is all about country needs. They are wounded of increasingly inflexible political groups who assault not just minorities of other confidence, but also intra-faith minorities.
Organization for Islamic Co-operation |
"I have no hesitation that there is room for religious freedom development in a few parts of the Islamic world with regard to permitting non- Islamics to have access to their holy facilities or arrangement of such amenities,” said Mr Ihsanoglu. I expect his words will have a crash on the idea and protection of wider minority human rights in the Muslim world, affecting not just to less number ssof more religions, but also in the Islamic fold. In Bangladesh, the secularist administration has been cracking down aggressively and breaking the rule of law when it comes to less number of Hindu , assaults on women, and arresting and killing resistance members, mainly among Islamist groups.
Here is the CNN interview with security Chief
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