Australia PM regrets dinner invite for 'anti-gay' cleric
Sheikh Shady Alsuleiman was present at an exclusive function at the Australian leader's official Sydney residence
SYDNEY:
Sheikh Shady Alsuleiman was present on Thursday evening at an exclusive function at the Australian leader's official Sydney residence Kirribilli House, alongside other leading Muslim figures.
In a sermon uploaded to YouTube in 2013 the sheikh, president of the Australian National Imams Council, said gay people were responsible for spreading diseases and attracted "evil outcomes to our society".
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Turnbull, MP for the Sydney seat that hosts the annual Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras parade, said he would not have invited him if he had known his views, emphasising the need for acceptance of diversity of sexuality and religion.
"I said earlier today, and I say again now, a statement of the strongest condemnation of those remarks," he told reporters.
"I regard as unacceptable, and I will always condemn, any remarks which disrespect any part of our community, whether it is on the basis of their sexuality, their gender, their race, their religion."
The faux pas came just days after Australia cancelled the visa of a British Muslim cleric who once preached that gays should be put to death, revelations that sparked an outcry in the wake of the Orlando gay nightclub killings.
Farrokh Sekaleshfar, who was in Sydney as the guest speaker of an Islamic centre, suggested in a 2013 lecture that death was a "compassionate" sentence for homosexuals.
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The Kirribilli function was the first time an Australian leader has hosted an iftar -- fast-breaking -- dinner and Turnbull, campaigning for election on July 2, praised the contribution Muslim people had made to Australia.
"Let me be very clear about this, and this was the theme of my address at the iftar -- we are the most successful multicultural society in the world," he said.
"The bedrock of that, the foundation, is mutual respect and that is why I reach out to every community, every community in our country is part of our nation."
Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull voiced regret Friday after inviting a senior Islamic leader who has condemned homosexuality to a fast-breaking Ramazan dinner.
Sheikh Shady Alsuleiman was present on Thursday evening at an exclusive function at the Australian leader's official Sydney residence Kirribilli House, alongside other leading Muslim figures.
In a sermon uploaded to YouTube in 2013 the sheikh, president of the Australian National Imams Council, said gay people were responsible for spreading diseases and attracted "evil outcomes to our society".
Muslim cleric who wants death penalty for homosexuals leaves Australia
Turnbull, MP for the Sydney seat that hosts the annual Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras parade, said he would not have invited him if he had known his views, emphasising the need for acceptance of diversity of sexuality and religion.
"I said earlier today, and I say again now, a statement of the strongest condemnation of those remarks," he told reporters.
"I regard as unacceptable, and I will always condemn, any remarks which disrespect any part of our community, whether it is on the basis of their sexuality, their gender, their race, their religion."
The faux pas came just days after Australia cancelled the visa of a British Muslim cleric who once preached that gays should be put to death, revelations that sparked an outcry in the wake of the Orlando gay nightclub killings.
Farrokh Sekaleshfar, who was in Sydney as the guest speaker of an Islamic centre, suggested in a 2013 lecture that death was a "compassionate" sentence for homosexuals.
Gay couple ‘humiliated’ by Emirates staff in Dubai
The Kirribilli function was the first time an Australian leader has hosted an iftar -- fast-breaking -- dinner and Turnbull, campaigning for election on July 2, praised the contribution Muslim people had made to Australia.
"Let me be very clear about this, and this was the theme of my address at the iftar -- we are the most successful multicultural society in the world," he said.
"The bedrock of that, the foundation, is mutual respect and that is why I reach out to every community, every community in our country is part of our nation."