Indian Imam deported from Singapore for remarks against Jews, Christian

However, he later apologised to the community

IANS  |  Singapore 

An Indian will be fined and deported back to his native country for his against and in his sermons, media reports said.

Nalla Mohamed Abdul Jameel, 47, was fined 4000 dollars ($2864) on Monday and will be deported to India after a video of one of his sermons showed him reciting a text that included the supplication, "God help us against the and the Christians", Haaretz news reported.

The text read out during Friday prayers at Singapore's Jamae Chulia mosque in January was not a Quranic excerpt, but rather has been described as an old text that originated from the Imam's native village in India.

In an effort to make amends, the paid a visit to Singapore's Maghain Aboth Synagogue on Sunday morning in order to apologise to the community.

The community leader Rabbi Mordechai Abergel accepted his apology, thanking the for his visit saying that it "sends a message that these bonds are not affected, and we share so much more than what divides us."

Singapore's Ministry of Home Affairs released a statement on Monday saying that "any religious leader from any who makes such statements will be held accountable for their actions."

"Under law, we cannot, regardless of his religion, allow anyone to preach or act divisively and justify that by reference to a religious text," it said.

Indian Imam deported from Singapore for remarks against Jews, Christian

However, he later apologised to the community

However, he later apologised to the community
An Indian will be fined and deported back to his native country for his against and in his sermons, media reports said.

Nalla Mohamed Abdul Jameel, 47, was fined 4000 dollars ($2864) on Monday and will be deported to India after a video of one of his sermons showed him reciting a text that included the supplication, "God help us against the and the Christians", Haaretz news reported.

The text read out during Friday prayers at Singapore's Jamae Chulia mosque in January was not a Quranic excerpt, but rather has been described as an old text that originated from the Imam's native village in India.

In an effort to make amends, the paid a visit to Singapore's Maghain Aboth Synagogue on Sunday morning in order to apologise to the community.

The community leader Rabbi Mordechai Abergel accepted his apology, thanking the for his visit saying that it "sends a message that these bonds are not affected, and we share so much more than what divides us."

Singapore's Ministry of Home Affairs released a statement on Monday saying that "any religious leader from any who makes such statements will be held accountable for their actions."

"Under law, we cannot, regardless of his religion, allow anyone to preach or act divisively and justify that by reference to a religious text," it said.

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