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Loudspeaker ban for Kigali mosques

Thursday March 15 2018
mosque

A resident overlooks the Kimironko mosque in Kigali on January 25, 2016. Mosques in parts of the Rwandan capital have been banned from using loudspeakers for the call to prayer. PHOTO | CYRIL NDEGEYA

By BBC

Mosques in parts of the Rwandan capital have been banned from using loudspeakers for the call to prayer - just weeks after the government closed hundreds of churches in Kigali.

The ban affects Nyarugenge sector, which is home to some of the Kigali's largest mosques.

Nyarugenge sector head Havuguziga Charles told the BBC Kinyarwanda service that the new regulations were aimed at curbing noise pollution, and had been met with little resistance by local imams.

"They have told us that it doesn’t matter (stop using loudspeakers)," he said. "I have found that they have begun to respect it and it has not stopped their followers from going to pray according to their praying time.”

However, Sheikh Salim Hitimana, head of the Supreme Muslim Council of Rwanda, told local news outlet KT Press the decision had taken them by surprise.

“We are going to meet the authority that issued the directive and discuss this decision. We will then share our stand,” he said.

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Another official from a Muslim association criticised the ban, saying it would be better to agree to keep down the volume and use the loudspeakers for a shorter time.

The bans comes after official actions which saw more than 700 churches and one mosque closed, mainly for breaching building regulations and noise pollution.

Some have since reopened, the government said.

The checks come ahead of a new law being introduced to govern how religious organisations are run - a move which critics see as further censorship.

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