German government rejects conservatives' call for Islam law
The arrival of thousands of Muslim migrants in Germany in recent years has rekindled debates about the country's relationship with Islam.
Berlin: The German government says there's no need for new legislation to regulate Islamic organisations in the country.
Members of Chancellor Angela Merkel's centre-right Christian Democratic Union party have called for a ban on foreign funding of Islamic organisations, and for Muslims to get statutory rights to pastoral care from an imam in prisons and hospitals.
Government spokesman Steffen Seibert said on Monday that such a law was "a non-issue" at the moment and noted that religious freedom is guaranteed by the German constitution.
The arrival of hundreds of thousands of Muslim migrants in Germany in recent years has rekindled public debates about the country's relationship with Islam.
A recent report by public broadcaster ARD found that the Islam preached in some mosques is more conservative than in many Muslim countries.