The NGO maintains all these temples in Selangor were legally built.
FMT
KUALA LUMPUR: Hindraf Makkal Sakthi is seeking an urgent meeting with Selangor Menteri Besar Azmin Ali on a reported 100 Hindu temples in the state which have purportedly been earmarked for demolition.
The meeting follows a public admission by Selangor Exco V Ganapathi Rao that some 100 Hindu temples, older than the recently demolished 60-year-old Sri Kottai Munisvarar Nageswary Temple, would be demolished by the state government.
He did not state the reasons for the pending demolitions.
Rao was lamenting that there was nothing much that he could do to save the Sri Kottai Munisvarar Nageswary Temple.
“Rao’s statement reminds us of the era of MIC and BN where they kept giving lame excuses for their inefficiency in tackling matters of public interest and concern,” said Hindraf vice-president Tamil Selvam. “He’s the lone Indian representative in the Exco and clearly outnumbered by the others.”
His helplessness, pointed out Tamil Selvam, stems from the fact he has not been given the mandate to handle the issue. “We understand his predicament.”
Hindraf, he stressed, had always maintained that these temples were never illegally built.”
The temples, he added, originated from plantations which were subsequently acquired by the government or sold to private developers. “They fail to appreciate the sensitivity of the issue.”
“Just because the plantations where the temples sit have been acquired by the government and developers, it does not mean that they can go on a demolition spree.”
FMT
KUALA LUMPUR: Hindraf Makkal Sakthi is seeking an urgent meeting with Selangor Menteri Besar Azmin Ali on a reported 100 Hindu temples in the state which have purportedly been earmarked for demolition.
The meeting follows a public admission by Selangor Exco V Ganapathi Rao that some 100 Hindu temples, older than the recently demolished 60-year-old Sri Kottai Munisvarar Nageswary Temple, would be demolished by the state government.
He did not state the reasons for the pending demolitions.
Rao was lamenting that there was nothing much that he could do to save the Sri Kottai Munisvarar Nageswary Temple.
“Rao’s statement reminds us of the era of MIC and BN where they kept giving lame excuses for their inefficiency in tackling matters of public interest and concern,” said Hindraf vice-president Tamil Selvam. “He’s the lone Indian representative in the Exco and clearly outnumbered by the others.”
His helplessness, pointed out Tamil Selvam, stems from the fact he has not been given the mandate to handle the issue. “We understand his predicament.”
Hindraf, he stressed, had always maintained that these temples were never illegally built.”
The temples, he added, originated from plantations which were subsequently acquired by the government or sold to private developers. “They fail to appreciate the sensitivity of the issue.”
“Just because the plantations where the temples sit have been acquired by the government and developers, it does not mean that they can go on a demolition spree.”
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