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Malaysia
This Week in AsiaPolitics

King warns Malaysians against taking advantage of ‘Allah’ socks scandal after petrol bomb attack, death threats

  • Sultan Ibrahim urges Malaysians, especially community leaders, to ‘act with maturity’ and learn from the incident to strengthen unity
  • The sale of ‘Allah’ socks has triggered backlash, with a politician receiving death threats and a foiled petrol bomb attack against a supermarket branch

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Malaysia’s King Sultan Ibrahim Iskandar says there is no need for any party to continue fuelling anger over the “Allah” socks incident. Photo: EPA-EFE/Information Department of Malaysia
Hadi Azmi

Malaysia’s king has called on all parties to stop taking advantage of the controversy over the sale of five pairs of socks bearing the word “Allah”, after an escalation of tension that saw death threats aimed at a politician and an attempt to petrol bomb a supermarket branch narrowly fail.

On Tuesday, the ethnic Chinese owner and directors of KK Super Mart and a factory which shipped the socks printed with the Arabic word for God – Allah – were charged in court with offending religious feelings, almost two weeks since the issue triggered an outpouring of outrage among some in Muslim-majority Malaysia.

They deny the charges but have already profusely apologised for allowing the socks to go on sale.

A customer walk out from KK Mart convenience store in Puchong area on the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on Tuesday. Photo: AP
A customer walk out from KK Mart convenience store in Puchong area on the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on Tuesday. Photo: AP

The issue has led to a surge of religious fervour among conservative sections of the Malay Muslim community, amping up racial tensions with the country’s sizeable Chinese and Indian communities that have been simmering since the last general election in 2022.

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In a statement on Wednesday, Sultan Ibrahim Iskandar, who recently took the throne, said there was no need for any party to continue fuelling anger and called on Malaysians to learn from the incident and strive to strengthen unity.

“Persistent anger brings no benefit. All parties, especially community leaders, must act with maturity,” the king said.

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This came after Melaka state police on Tuesday announced that they had apprehended a 68-year-old car mechanic for making death threats against Akmal Saleh, the leader of Malay nationalist party Umno’s youth wing who had been at the forefront of the issue, calling for a boycott against the supermarket’s 881 branches nationwide.

“The suspect said that the Umno youth chief is being overboard in the KK Mart issue [and] one day will surely be shot dead,” said district police commissioner Christopher Patit.

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