In Muslim countries, court battles over the recognition of conversions out of Islam to another religion continue. In the Malaysian state of Penang, the Sharia Appeal Court has issued one of the rare decisions permitting a woman to renounce Islam and convert back to Buddhism. According to Reuters yesterday, the court held that Tan Ean Huang, an ethnic Chinese woman, had purportedly converted to Islam in 1998, as required by Malaysian law in order to marry a Muslim man. The court concluded, however, that she has never followed Islamic teachings and has been living a non-Muslim lifestyle, making the validity of the original conversion doubtful.
Meanwhile, in Egypt a lawyer has filed suit against the Minister of Interior seeking to make it easier for Christian converts to Islam to reconvert to Christianity. Currently Egyptian law requires a court to approve the reconversion. According to Monday's Christian Today, the lawsuit seeks to require the government to recognize a certificate of conversion from the Coptic Patriarchate as sufficient, just as a decree from Al-Azhar is sufficient for conversion into Islam.