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Indian Muslim leader Syed Shahabuddin dies aged 82

04 марта
14:05 2017
Assembled Indian Muslims bury Syed Shahabuddin, wrapped in a shroud, in New Delhi on March 4, 2017Image copyright Getty Images
Image caption Syed Shahabuddin is buried in New Delhi following a prolonged illness

Indian politician Syed Shahabuddin, an influential political figure for minority Indian Muslims, has died aged 82.

The former diplomat was known for opposing the controversial demolition of the Babri Masjid mosque.

He served as an MP for three terms between 1979 and 1996, and also successfully campaigned to ban Salman Rushdie's novel The Satanic Verses.

He died in hospital following a prolonged illness, local media said.

Syed Shahabuddin previously worked as an Indian Foreign Service officer and also led the All India Muslim Majlis-e-Mushawarat - the country's top-level forum for Muslim organisations.

Mr Shahabuddin was also the head of the Babri Action Committee, an organisation dedicated to the preservation of a 16th Century mosque in Ayodhya.

The contested ownership of the site and its eventual demolition created national tension between Hindus and Muslims, resulting in the 1992 riots in which 2,000 people died. The site remains a flashpoint today.

Image copyright Getty Images
Image caption Mourners gathered to offer prayers for the Muslim political leader

He also came to international attention for his efforts to ban The Satanic Verses, whose publication in 1988 outraged Muslims around the world, with many arguing it was blasphemous.

Mr Shahabuddin was widely seen as responsible for preventing the book from being imported into India - the first country to introduce such a ban.

The book is comprised of three stories woven together. One of them - the most controversial - features a prophet named Mahound, who founds a religion in the desert.

That story is inspired by an apocryphal incident in the life of the Prophet Muhammad, called the Satanic Verses.

Image caption India was the first to ban the novel, but protests spread through Pakistan, Iran, and the UK - seen here

It references verses of the Koran which the Prophet Muhammad later retracted as incorrect - and blamed on the prompting of Satan.

The issue is a controversial one for scholars and religious teachers.

Following the controversy over Rushdie's novel, Ayatollah Khomeini of Iran issued a fatwa ordering Muslims to kill the author.

The book is still banned in India.

Source

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