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[ Tuesday, 12 February 2008 ]
 
Say Asala's concert is an "invitation for vice"
Yemen Islamists try to stop Syrian diva's concert
Asala is a renowned Syrian singer (File)

ADEN, Yemen (Reuters)

Yemeni Islamists have defaced billboards promoting an Arab diva and an Islamist lawmaker dubbed her planned concert as an "invitation for vice", raising concern among liberals in the conservative Arab country.

Asala, a renowned Syrian singer, often criticizes flashy female artists who rely more on their looks and steamy music videos than their talent, but that has failed to stem criticism.

"We have to play a significant role to stop the concert Asala will hold in Aden because it is a violation of Sharia (Islamic law)," Islamist parliamentarian Fouad Dahaba said in a statement circulated through mobile telephone messages.

"Holding this concert ranks as an invitation for vice."

Dahaba's call was echoed by several prayer leaders in their Friday sermons who also criticized women's sports and some other art forms and activities they see as sacrilegious.

But several liberals in the Arabian Peninsula country, said Dahaba's call showed a rising Islamist tide.

"Do not believe the enemies of your city who want to change its character and isolate it from the world the same way the Taliban did to Afghanistan," October 14, a semi-official newspaper said in an editorial referring to the al-Qaeda-allied rulers of Afghanistan, toppled in 2001 in a U.S.-led invasion.

Ali al-Maqari, who performs songs inspired by Islamic ideas, said Yemenis welcomed Asala, adding that Islam was key to the evolution of several art forms in the region, a view shared by many Muslims.

While concerts in Many Muslim countries are regular events, some more conservative societies reject public entertainment by women in line with Islamic teachings.

In 2003, Bahraini Islamists fought pitched battles with police during a protest against a concert by Lebanese singer Nancy Ajram whose performance they deemed immoral and several lawmakers sought to ban her show in Manama.

Yemen is ruled by a secular U.S.-allied government that joined Washington's "war on terror" after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on U.S. cities, but society is conservative at heart.

عودة للأعلى


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