I’m sick of hearing the dangerous and perverted views of these people. AND particularly their their leaders. If they have beliefs at odds and in conflict with a secular democracy they need to be weeded out and thrown out of the country, not wined and dined at Kirrabilli House. These clerics and leaders are so fixated on gays and sex generally they would have to be categorised as having some very deep seated psychiatric issues.
“…Malcolm Turnbull last night hosted at Kirribilli one of Australia’s most senior Islamic leaders who has condemned homosexuality for “spreading diseases” and attracting “evil outcomes to our society”.
Anti-gay Muslim sheik Shady Alsuleiman attends Turnbull’s dinner
Four days after 49 people were shot dead in a gay nightclub in Orlando by Islamic State supporter Omar Mateen, Sheik Shady Alsuleiman was among dozens of Muslim leaders invited to the first ever Iftar — the evening meal at which Muslims end their daily fast during the holy month of Ramadan — to be staged by an Australian prime minister.
Sheik Alsuleiman, who was elected president of the Australian National Imams Council last year, arrived at Mr Turnbull’s Iftar dinner alongside Grand Mufti Ibrahim Abu Mohammad. “What’s the most common disease these days?” he said in a sermon uploaded in YouTube in 2013. “HIV, Aids, that’s so common and there’s no cure to it. And when did it exist? Just decades ago, and more diseases are coming.”
He said it was “homosexuality that’s spreading all these diseases”.
Mr Turnbull, who is the MP for the Sydney seat of Wentworth, which hosts the annual Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras, was forced to condemn his guests’ comments during the feast.
“Views like this are wrong, unacceptable and I condemn them,” he told The Australian.
Sheik Alsuleiman was joined at the dinner by Australian Federation of Islamic Councils president Hafez Kassem who said he was “very upset” by the Orlando massacre but suggested people should abstain from homosexual acts or be treated with “medication” if they could not. “There is no punishment, there is a treatment,” he said. “Our sharia says treatment. We have to give treatment, medication, like the prophet said force yourself (to abstain from) something like this,” Mr Kassem said.
The dinner came a day after Mr Turnbull promised to examine why Islamic cleric Farrokh Sekaleshfar, who had defended the death penalty for homosexuals, was not on a visa “watch list”.
The British sheik left the country voluntarily on Tuesday night after it emerged he had said of homosexuality that “death is the sentence” and “there’s nothing to be embarrassed about this”.
Supreme Islamic Shia Council of Australia head Kamal Mousselmani, who also attended the Kirribilli feast, defended Sheikh Farrokh Sekaleshfar’s comments about gay people saying it was “his opinion”. “He (Sekaleshfar) said, in some places, in some governments they might be punished to death … it does not mean we agree with this,” Mr Mousselmani said.
“It’s a sin but it does not mean go kill them. It’s prohibited for you to do … whoever kills will go to hell. God will punish him in hell. If my son for example would become gay I would not talk to him. This is my opinion, this is my right.”
Despite assuring The Australian while entering Kirribilli House they would answer questions after the interfaith dialogue, the Grand Mufti and Sheik Alsuleiman left the event half an hour early and walked quickly to their car, declining to answer questions.
The sheik later released a statement, saying: “I reject the claim that I made statements wishing or wanting punishment against the gay community or the individuals. I have previously noted passages in the holy Quran which do not support homosexuality. However, I always follow such statements with a personal commitment to tolerance and encouragement that all Muslims and all people approach all individuals, no matter their faith, race or sexuality, in a considerate and respectful way.”
In a speech at the event last night, Mr Turnbull discussed the weekend’s massacre in Orlando.
“Acts of terror … are perpetrated to divide us along lines of race, religion, sect and sexuality — but that kind of hatred and division must not prevail,” he said.
Mr Turnbull earlier told The Australian “mutual respect” was the key to the success of the country’s “diverse, tolerant, multicultural society”, and condemned Sheik Alsuleiman’s comments. Bill Shorten said there should be “no tolerance for this kind of inflammatory language”. Deputy Greens leader Adam Bandt could not comment last night as he was at a memorial for Orlando victims.
The dinner came a day after Mr Turnbull promised to examine why Islamic cleric Farrokh Sekaleshfar, who had defended the death penalty for homosexuals, was not on a visa “watch list”.
The British sheik left the country voluntarily on Tuesday night after it emerged he had said of homosexuality that “death is the sentence” and “there’s nothing to be embarrassed about this”.
Supreme Islamic Shia Council of Australia head Kamal Mousselmani, who also attended the Kirribilli feast, defended Sheikh Farrokh Sekaleshfar’s comments about gay people saying it was “his opinion”. “He (Sekaleshfar) said, in some places, in some governments they might be punished to death … it does not mean we agree with this,” Mr Mousselmani said.
“It’s a sin but it does not mean go kill them. It’s prohibited for you to do … whoever kills will go to hell. God will punish him in hell. If my son for example would become gay I would not talk to him. This is my opinion, this is my right.”
Despite assuring The Australian while entering Kirribilli House they would answer questions after the interfaith dialogue, the Grand Mufti and Sheik Alsuleiman left the event half an hour early and walked quickly to their car, declining to answer questions.
The sheik later released a statement, saying: “I reject the claim that I made statements wishing or wanting punishment against the gay community or the individuals. I have previously noted passages in the holy Quran which do not support homosexuality. However, I always follow such statements with a personal commitment to tolerance and encouragement that all Muslims and all people approach all individuals, no matter their faith, race or sexuality, in a considerate and respectful way.”
In a speech at the event last night, Mr Turnbull discussed the weekend’s massacre in Orlando.
“Acts of terror … are perpetrated to divide us along lines of race, religion, sect and sexuality — but that kind of hatred and division must not prevail,” he said.
Mr Turnbull earlier told The Australian “mutual respect” was the key to the success of the country’s “diverse, tolerant, multicultural society”, and condemned Sheik Alsuleiman’s comments. Bill Shorten said there should be “no tolerance for this kind of inflammatory language”. Deputy Greens leader Adam Bandt could not comment last night as he was at a memorial for Orlando victims…”