Sri Lankan author arrested: report

monson

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    March 27, 2010 (AFP) - An author who wrote a book about her conversion from Buddhism to Islam has been arrested in Sri Lanka accused of unspecified "anti-state" activities, police said Saturday.
    The woman, identified as Malini Perera, was taken into custody during the week under tough emergency laws, police spokesman Prashantha Jayakjody told AFP without elaborating.

    Media reports said the writer, a native Sri Lankan who is resident in Bahrain, was detained while on holiday on the island after trying to mail two copies of her book to undisclosed recipients abroad.

    Majority-Buddhist Sri Lanka projects itself as a secular country but is highly sensitive to any debate on Buddhism.

    The BBC's Sinhalese language service quoted a friend as saying Perera had written a book on why she converted to Islam, but had not been disrespectful of Buddhism in the work.

    "She only talks about religious unity," the unidentified associate told the BBC. "There is nothing offensive in her book. She is being denied legal assistance and is yet to be charged."

    The exact title or the publisher of the book was not immediately known.

    This month, Sri Lanka refused a visa to US singer Akon after Buddhist monks and almost 12,000 people on social networking site Facebook complained about one of his videos featuring women in bikinis dancing near a Buddha statue.
     

    monson

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    Sri Lankan who wrote about Islam conversion held
    2010-03-27 17:14:07

    COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) — Sri Lankan police have arrested an author who converted from Buddhism to Islam and wrote two books about taking up her new faith, police said Saturday.

    Buddhism is the religion of some 70 percent of Sri Lanka's 20 million people, and the country's constitution guarantees the faith a prominent role.

    Authorities and many Sri Lankans are sensitive to perceived slights to Buddhism. Last week a mob hurled stones at a private broadcaster protesting a planned concert by R&B star Akon, who appeared in a music video in which scantily clad women dance in front of a Buddha statue.

    Police spokesman Prishantha Jayakody confirmed the arrest of Sarah Malini Perera — who lives in Bahrain but was visiting her native Sri Lanka when she was taken into custody. Jayakody said he did not know the reason for her detention.

    The Bahrain-based Gulf Daily News reported Saturday that Perera was detained last week as she prepared to ship copies of her books to Bahrain after spending a holiday in Sri Lanka.

    Perera, who converted to Islam in 1999, has written two books in her native Sinhalese about changing her faith, "From Darkness to Light" and "Questions and Answers," the newspaper reported.

    "I believe the books written by Ms. Perera are not against Buddhism," Bahrain Human Rights Society secretary-general Abdulla Al Deerazi told the newspaper.