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Life & Style

Maldives stamps down on 'indecent' dancing

Published September 13, 2012 Updated September 13, 2012 11:05pm

maldives-homeCOLOMBO: The Maldives on Thursday moved to limit dancing in public between men and women, an official and a report said, amid signs of the growing influence of the nation's religious party.

The Islamic affairs ministry sent a circular "to all government institutions banning the holding of any mixed-gender dance events", the private Minivan newspaper said, quoting guidelines issued on Thursday.

The ministry also ordered a ban on events where adolescent girls were required to dance, the report said, adding that the directives were intended for both state bodies and individual citizens.

It was not immediately clear if the move was legally enforceable under existing regulations, and Minivan said there were exemptions.

"Events such as children's activities, performances exhibiting military skills, parades, playing the national anthem, boy scouts and girl guides performances... were acceptable forms of entertainment," it said.

There was no immediate comment from the president's office or the foreign ministry, but Youth Affairs Minister Mohamed Shareef said the "guidelines" were only targeting "indecent" behaviour.

"There is a public debate on music and dance and what is permissible according to religion and culture," Shareef said when contacted by telephone. "What the guidelines are saying is that if people are dancing in an indecent manner, it should not be allowed."

The move came as a Twitter account purporting to be from the religious Adhaalath Party, a part of the government, said "music and songs" were harming young people in the nation of 330,000 Sunni Muslims.

The party said in a brief text message it had nothing to do with the Twitter account that shared the name of their party, and that the party did not endorse the views expressed by on the feed, but did not elaborate on the new measures.

Copyright AFP (Agence France-Presse), 2012

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