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Australian Muslims Fear Being Target of Anti-Terror Laws

Australian Muslims felt the laws were part of a wave of anti-Islamic sentiment sweeping the country after the October 12 Bali bombing

SYDNEY, December 4 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – Australian Muslims on Wednesday, December 4, raised fears that new anti-terrorism laws would unfairly target them and stir up anti-Muslim sentiments.

Federal legislators are currently considering laws which would give the ASIO intelligence agency the right to detain suspects for seven days while New South Wales state is set to pass a bill giving police sweeping new powers, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.

But Australian Federation of Muslim Councils spokesman Kuranda Seyit said Australian Muslims felt the laws were part of a wave of anti-Islamic sentiment sweeping the country after the October 12 Bali bombing that killed more than 190 people, nearly half of them Australian.

"It seems to be focusing unjustifiably on Muslims and if we go along this line we're going to create something similar to Nazi Germany when there was this anti-Jewish sentiment," he told AFP.

"Bali has inflamed the situation. It's fair enough to target Islamic radicals responsible for terrorism but these laws fall into the trap of the hawks and the neo-fascists who want to re-ignite the controversy."

The proposed NSW laws give police the power to sweep and search target areas, demanding identification and confiscating items.

They come amid raised tensions following armed ASIO raids on the homes of Australian Muslims which were condemned by governments in Southeast Asia.

"What we fear is the Muslim community will be vilified, victimized and be put into a greater state of fear than it already is," Noor Al Houda Islamic College principal Silma Ihram said.

Muslim leaders confirmed leaflets calling for a boycott of U.S. and Australian companies featuring an image of a young boy with a bullet wound had been distributed to Muslims in western Sydney.

The leaflet listed 35 companies it accused of financing anti-Palestinian activities.

Lebanese Muslim Association spokesman Keysar Trad condemned the leaflet's "shock value" and claimed it had no official backing from the Australian Muslim community.

Seyit said the leaflet provided no proof the listed companies were anti-Palestinian and he was concerned some were targeted because they were part-owned by Jews.

"I have no problem with the principle of boycotting any company backing anti-Palestinian activities, as long as they are peaceful.

"Boycotts can be a powerful tool in a desperate struggle."

But he added that it was "wrong to target companies simply because they have Jewish ownership."

Seyit said the leaflet was probably being distributed by an individual who accessed information off the Internet.

Mufti of Australia Sheikh Taj Aldin Alhilali said the controversies overshadowed preparations for Thursday's Eid-ul-Fitr festival celebrating the end of Ramadan, when more than 35,000 Muslims will gather at Sydney's Lakemba mosque to pray for peace.

Alhilali said recent events domestically and overseas had "seen people transforming into ravenous wolves preying on one another".

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