Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Friday, November 06, 2009
Chechnya Will Pay For Hajj Trips For 400 Residents
In Russia's Chechnya region, Chechen president Ramzan Kadyrov has ordered the government to pay for 400 residents to go to Mecca on this year's Hajj. Reuters reported yesterday that trips will be financed for those who cannot afford to go, for the single and the young, out of a fund Kadyrov has created to honor father who was assassinated in a bomb blast in 2004. Kadyrov has previously awarded prizes for newborns named after the Prophet Muhammad, has banned alcohol and required women to wear headscarves in government offices in this predominately Muslim region of Russia. He is now planning to build "the world's most beautiful mosque." Recently suicide bombs and armed attacks on Chechen police have shattered a few years of calm.