World News

Malaysia’s new government concerns Christians, minorities.

The sudden resignation of Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad in late February and the succession of Muhyiddin Yassin, a Malay nationalist, present new challenges to the Christians and minority groups in the country. "It is actually illegal to witness or share about Jesus Christ with a Malay, you can actually go to jail".

 

This new government is taking Malaysia back to a position favoring the Muslim Malay majority, a group which has long held power in the country but lost in the 2018 elections. Malaysia’s minorities are now concerned that the emergence of the hardline Islamist party PAS as part of conservative Muslim Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin’s new coalition government would sacrifice their rights.

Michael Sainsbury from UCA News shares that in Malaysia, geographically at the more Muslim end of the Malay-Indonesia archipelago, the hardliners have gained a foothold in the federal ruling alliance for the first time since 1974. This has sparked immediate and obvious fears from Christian denominations.

The law in Malaysia states that ethnic Malays have to be Muslim, and sharing gospel with them could land you in jail, Libby Lauren from Trans World Radio told Mission Network News, “It is actually illegal to witness or share about Jesus Christ with a Malay, you can actually go to jail. I know some people who have actually gone to jail because of missionary activity in Malaysia.”

Please continue to read the whole article here.

Leave a reply