Asian Muslims unmoved by Saddam's fall

Asian Muslims have refused to buy into the joy in Iraq over Saddam Hussein's fall, saying the United States has set an ominous precedent that will resonate long after the guns fell silent.

In majority Muslim Indonesia and Malaysia, opinion was that distrust of U.S. intentions toward Muslims in general would take a long time to heal even though there is little love for the Iraqi leader in this mainly moderate part of the Islamic world.

Some said a long-term consequence was on moderates, and how they viewed the United States, with many seeing imperialism instead of a country promoting democracy and human rights.

Debate on progressive Islam was also now out of fashion.

"At the bottom of many hearts, the hatred of America will linger, the hate is very, very deep," said Syafii Maarif, head of the 30-million strong Muhammadiyah, Indonesia's second biggest moderate Muslim group.

"I don't support Saddam but the destruction of Iraq is the destruction of good conscience and the most noble of human values," he said, adding U.S. President George W. Bush was the modern version of Gengis Khan, the notorious Mongol conqueror.

Saddam's harsh 24-year reign over Iraq collapsed overnight as U.S. troops tightened their grip on the heart of Baghdad.

Pictures of jubilant Iraqis dancing on top of fallen statues of their deposed ruler dominated the front pages in Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim country.

But some have taken a line like that of Republika, a Muslim newspaper, whose front-page banner headline read: "Colonising soldiers hold Baghdad". It had a picture of a U.S. soldier draping the Stars and Stripes over the head of a Saddam statue.

U.N. LESS RELEVANT

Annuar Musa, a leader in Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad's ruling party, said Saddam's downfall showed Washington ruled the world and that the United Nations was less relevant.

"This sends a very bad signal to Muslim countries, that those who are against the Israelis could face economic or military pressure from the U.S.," Annuar said.

"We won't see Muslims in Malaysia jumping for joy."

Hafiz Hussain Ahmed, a senior member of Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal, an alliance of six Islamic religious parties in Pakistan, said the United States had failed to achieve its objective of finding Saddam or any chemical weapons.

"Now they are indicating that Saddam has escaped to Syria, which means now it is Syria's turn," he said.

Ulil Abshar-Abdalla, a prominent Indonesian Muslim intellectual, said the war had badly hurt efforts to promote liberal discourse on Islam, such as debate about inter-religious marriages, and would continue to do so in Indonesia.

Many people had labelled such debate pro-American, he said.

"In Indonesia after the Bali bombings, Muslims realised this is a big problem, this terrorism and radicalism. People were rethinking everything," Abshar-Abdalla said.

"The feeling now is why should we examine ourselves and our religion when the United States is doing this."

Indonesia has blamed Islamic militants for last year's Bali bomb attacks, which killed 202 people, mainly foreigners.

WAGE WAR AGAINST AMERICA

There have been some major protests in Indonesia over the war although no violence. Diplomats attributed the peaceful expression to a concerted move by moderates and the government to seize the initiative on the issue, sidelining the militant voices.

Among Thai Muslims, who make up about 10 percent of the country's population, reaction was much the same.

"Muslims have to wage a war against America until they change their policy not to invade other countries," said Kariya Kijjarak, deputy secretary-general of the Central Islamic Committee of Thailand. "We cannot stop after the war is over."

"The U.S. claims that it's liberation. But other Muslim countries are ruled by monarchs -- it is not democracy. What if the U.S. claims later that they are liberating these countries?"

Reaction, however, was markedly different among Australian Iraqis who were glued to their televisions overnight watching the downfall of Saddam's regime.

"It's great, mate," said Salah Toma when asked how he felt as he watched a Saddam statue torn down and smashed up in Baghdad.