Malaysia can be Muslim ‘thought leader’, says Clinton

DNE
DNE
4 Min Read

KUALA LUMPUR: US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Tuesday that Muslim-majority Malaysia can be a global "thought leader", praising the multicultural nation’s efforts to avoid religious rifts.

On a visit to cultivate ties with the moderate country, Clinton told an Islamic university forum in Kuala Lumpur that Malaysia can be influential among both the world’s Muslims and the broader international community.

"Malaysia, both by geography, (its) dynamism, the role that Islam plays, which is a role that is not divisive as it is in some parts of the world, has a real opportunity to be a thought leader in a number of significant areas," she said.

She lauded Malaysia’s "creative approach" to Islamic finance and noted the presence of civil society group "Sisters in Islam", which she said promotes the role of women within Islamic traditions.

Malaysia’s population is dominated by Muslim Malays, living alongside large ethnic Chinese and Indian communities. After serious ethnic violence in 1969, great efforts have been made to avoid a repeat of the bloodshed.

The chief US diplomat praised the Southeast Asian country’s efforts to boost the economy while protecting the environment and "creative ways" to deal with deforestation.

Clinton made the remarks at the International Institute for Islamic Thought and Civilization, where she fielded questions about US foreign policy in a program broadcast on Malaysian television.

When he took office in January 2009, President Barack Obama vowed to get US relations with the Muslim world on a fresh footing after the previous administration of George W. Bush.

Clinton also told students that the United States was working hard for a solution to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, in response to an audience member’s comment that Muslims were frustrated with a sense that America was pro-Israel.

She said the United States was equally supportive of the Palestinians and Israelis, backing a secure Israel living alongside a Palestinian state.

"It is important for a country like Malaysia to support Palestinians in their state building," she added.

Later, Clinton held talks with Malaysian Foreign Minister Anifah Aman and Deputy Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin, who is standing in for Prime Minister Najib Razak, who has chickenpox.

She also met Malaysian women leaders, including top bankers.

Malaysia has positioned itself as a center for Islamic finance, a booming trillion-dollar industry which follows religious laws prohibiting the payment and collection of interest.

Malaysia is the fifth stop on an Asia tour that has taken Clinton to Guam, Vietnam, China and Cambodia. She is still to visit Papua New Guinea, New Zealand, Australia and American Samoa.

"Few countries have come as far in terms of our bilateral relationship as the one between the United States and Malaysia," Clinton’s top diplomat for Asia, Kurt Campbell, said before the tour began.

He cited "enormous progress on a range of issues — (nuclear) proliferation issues, political coordination and strategic dialogue."

Malaysia is also important as a member of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, an organization the Obama administration is trying to re-engage with after blaming the Bush administration for ignoring it.

Relations with Washington were rocky when Malaysia was led by Mahathir Mohamad, who was known for his strident criticism of the West during his two-decade rule, which ended in 2003.

The United States sometimes riled Malaysia with calls to expand democratic freedoms.

 

 

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