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  1. #1
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    Indonesian Officials, Clerics Ban Valentine's Day Observance

    Agence France-Presse | Updated: February 14, 2016 17:15 IST

    JAKARTA, INDONESIA: Indonesian officials and Muslim clerics have banned young Muslims from celebrating Valentine's Day, arguing that the observance runs against Islamic teachings.

    In Banda Aceh, the capital of the devout Muslim province of Aceh, thousands of high school students held rallies rejecting the celebration of Valentine's Day.

    The city's mayor, Illiza Sa'aduddin Djamal, and Shariah officials joined Saturday's rallies.

    The mayor said the rallies were aimed at making people aware that Valentine's Day is not part of Islamic culture.

    A similar rally by junior high school students was held in Surabaya, Indonesia's second-largest city.

    Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim nation, practices a moderate form of Islam.

    Indonesian Officials, Clerics Ban Valentine's Day Observance


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    Pakistan president condemns St Valentine's Day

    • 13 February 2016



    Image caption Valentine's Day is popular in much of Pakistan Pakistan's president has denounced St Valentine's Day, saying the festival has no connection with Pakistani culture and should be avoided.


    President Mamnoon Hussain told students that it was a Western tradition and conflicted with Muslim culture.


    His remarks came after a district in north-western Pakistan banned Valentine's Day celebrations.
    Valentine's Day is popular in many cities in Pakistan, but religious groups have denounced it as decadent.
    Image copyright Kohat District Government Earlier this week, the local government in Kohat, in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, told police officers to stop shops from selling Valentine's Day cards and items.


    Kohat district is run by a religious political party and borders Pakistan's conservative tribal areas.
    Meanwhile, the Peshawar local council also passed a resolution to ban celebrations of what it called a "useless" day.


    Kohat district administrator Maulana Niaz Muhammad told the BBC Urdu: "Valentine's Day has no legal grounds, and secondly it is against our religion, therefore it was banned."


    Image copyright AFP/Getty Image caption Protesters in Karachi hold banners with slogans such as 'No love, no Valentine' While giving cards and flowers was not in itself a bad thing, linking this to a specific day was not appropriate, Mr Muhammad said. He added that he felt such practices could encourage obscene behaviour.


    However, officials in both places later said the bans had been discarded or ignored for being unpopular.
    Earlier this week, there were unconfirmed media reports that Valentine's Day gifts had been banned in the capital Islamabad - although this was subsequently denied by the government.

    No love lost over St Valentine's Day

    Image copyright AFP The issue of St Valentine's Day is a polarising one in Pakistan, a country where it has only become widely marked in recent years, writes the BBC World Service's South Asia editor Charles Haviland.
    In the run-up to this year's festival, one conservative newspaper described it as a "festival of obscenity", asking if Pakistanis would next start celebrating the Hindu Diwali or the Christian Christmas.
    In past years, conservative social groups, who view the day as a festival of immorality detrimental to traditional marriage, have declared the day to be "shameless".


    Renowned civil society activist Sabeen Mahmud once set up a demonstration with slogans including "Karachi says Yes to Love". (Last April, she was killed in a drive-by shooting, although not necessarily for that particular issue.)


    In neighbouring India, Valentine's Day also garners opposition, usually from Hindu conservatives who say it is alien to Indian culture and - as argued by Pakistani Muslims - contrary to traditions such as arranged marriages.

    http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-35570606

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