05-04-2007, 09:32 AM
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><b>Mosque minarets a threat: Swiss MPs</b>
GENEVA: Right-wing politicians from Switzerlandâs largest political party on Thursday <b>launched a campaign for a referendum to ban the construction of minarets on mosques, claiming they symbolised an Islamist bid for power</b>. The group, including more than half of the Swiss Peopleâs Partyâs (SVP) parliamentarians, said in a statement that a ban would help stop âattempts by Islamist circles to impose a legal system based on the sharia in Switzerlandâ. Some of the politicians said they did not oppose mosques or Muslimsâ right to worship. The Swiss constitution guarantees religious freedoms and the legality of the initiative was questioned by one former judge. <b>Parliamentarian Oskar Freysinger branded minarets âlighthouses of jihad</b>â while his colleague Ulrich Schlueer claimed that they were âIslamist buildings with an imperialist connotationâ. Schlueer said minarets were not a religious symbol but a sign of a âpolitical-religious bid for powerâ. Under the rules of Switzerlandâs âpeopleâs initiativeâ, the campaigners need to collect at least 100,000 signatures by November 2008 backing their call in order to trigger a national referendum on the issue, subject to legal checks. The campaigners want to amend another constitutional article that upholds peace between members of religious communities, by inserting a clause explicitly forbidding the construction of minarets. The move follows at least four localised challenges by rightwingers to plans to build small minarets or even the principle, although the challenges have often been rejected by local authorities or courts. There are just two mosques in Switzerland with minarets, in Zurich and Geneva, built in the 1960s and 1970s. Swiss Roman Catholic bishops dealing with relations with Muslims said in a statement that they opposed the campaign for a blanket ban on minarets. Supporters of the anti-minaret initiative include 36 of the SVPâs 63 parliamentarians and two from a small hard right party. The SVPâs assembly is due to decide next month whether or not to grant the partyâs support to the initiative. The campaign will also coincide with general elections in October. afp
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GENEVA: Right-wing politicians from Switzerlandâs largest political party on Thursday <b>launched a campaign for a referendum to ban the construction of minarets on mosques, claiming they symbolised an Islamist bid for power</b>. The group, including more than half of the Swiss Peopleâs Partyâs (SVP) parliamentarians, said in a statement that a ban would help stop âattempts by Islamist circles to impose a legal system based on the sharia in Switzerlandâ. Some of the politicians said they did not oppose mosques or Muslimsâ right to worship. The Swiss constitution guarantees religious freedoms and the legality of the initiative was questioned by one former judge. <b>Parliamentarian Oskar Freysinger branded minarets âlighthouses of jihad</b>â while his colleague Ulrich Schlueer claimed that they were âIslamist buildings with an imperialist connotationâ. Schlueer said minarets were not a religious symbol but a sign of a âpolitical-religious bid for powerâ. Under the rules of Switzerlandâs âpeopleâs initiativeâ, the campaigners need to collect at least 100,000 signatures by November 2008 backing their call in order to trigger a national referendum on the issue, subject to legal checks. The campaigners want to amend another constitutional article that upholds peace between members of religious communities, by inserting a clause explicitly forbidding the construction of minarets. The move follows at least four localised challenges by rightwingers to plans to build small minarets or even the principle, although the challenges have often been rejected by local authorities or courts. There are just two mosques in Switzerland with minarets, in Zurich and Geneva, built in the 1960s and 1970s. Swiss Roman Catholic bishops dealing with relations with Muslims said in a statement that they opposed the campaign for a blanket ban on minarets. Supporters of the anti-minaret initiative include 36 of the SVPâs 63 parliamentarians and two from a small hard right party. The SVPâs assembly is due to decide next month whether or not to grant the partyâs support to the initiative. The campaign will also coincide with general elections in October. afp
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