Home About Us Contact Us Join our team
NEWS WITHOUT BORDERS
Local News
International News
CityPlus
Media & Marketing
Stock Prices
SPEAK UP!
theSun Says
Columnists
Letters
At the Dewan Rakyat
EXTRA!
Cover Stories
Conversations
Comment & Analysis
Views
Feature
GALLERIES
SunPix
FEATURES
theSun-MAPCU Scholarship Fund 2010
U!
Education
Glow & His
Festive & Special Occasions
Merdeka Stories
Year in Review
TIME OUT
People
Books
Tech Today
Lifestyle
Beauty
Fashion
Style
Zest
Health
Good Vibes
Parenting
Shopping
where2eat
Entertainment
Movies
Music
Sports
Going Places
Wheels
EVENTS & PROMOS
theSun Motor Hunt 2009
Neighbourhood Fun with theSun
ADVERTISING
theSun Jobs (classifieds)
Advertising Rates
Online Rates
Join our team

NEWS ALERT:     Federal Court rules Zambry is rightful MB of Perak, dismisses Nizar's appeal              NEWS ALERT:    Anwar sodomy trial postponed to tomorrow; defence to file a response to prosecution's affidavit-in-reply to Anwar's recusal application                        NEWS ALERT:      Najib: All quarters should accept Federal Court decision and stop politicising issue; concentrate on working for the people of Perak

Wed, 10 Feb 2010
NEWS WITHOUT BORDERS :: Local News
Shop-house churches must get permits
Maria J.Dass

PETALING JAYA (Feb 18, 2008): Churches in Subang Jaya which have been operating out of shop and factory lots have not been asked to close down, said incumbent Subang Jaya assemblyman Datuk Lee Hwa Beng.

“We have not asked them to close down, but to submit their application for permits,” said Lee, adding that such churches have to get a permit to operate from business premises.

He said many of the churches which are not on religious land have not applied for these annual permits costing RM1,000.

Lee was responding to a statement by incumbent Seputeh MP Teresa Kok that churches in MPSJ need to show concern about the municipality’s draft local plan.

According to her, only one church (First Baptist in SS17) is deemed to be legally on religious land in Subang Jaya, and that all others are officially illegal.

Kok said most of the churches were unaware of the draft local plan and it was now too late to submit their objection as the objection period was over.

She had however filed an objection on the issue, and called for more religious land to be allotted for non-Muslim places of worship.

Lee, when contacted, said the opposition was twisting the issue as the council had not asked the churches to close down but asked them to apply for permits.

Asked if this was the same requirement imposed on mosques, suraus and temples, Lee said: "If they are on their own land then there is no need for them to apply for the permits for their religious houses, but in the cases of the churches, they need to apply for the permits because they are operating from out of the shoplots in business centres and factory lots in industrial areas."


Updated: 06:19PM Mon, 18 Feb 2008
Printable Version | Email to a Friend
 

ADVERTISEMENTS









 













 
Copyright© 2009 Sun Media Corporation Sdn. Bhd. All rights reserved. See terms and conditions.