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Islamic scholars at Saudi meet urge 'extremists' to repent

The four-day Islamic conference, sponsored by Saudi interior minister Prince Nayef bin Abdul-Aziz and organised by the Islamic University of Medina, drew some 500 participants.

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Muslim scholars from around the world who met this week in Saudi Arabia's holy city Medina have denounced "terrorism" and appealed to "extremists" to repent, a statement said today.

The four-day Islamic conference, sponsored by Saudi interior minister Prince Nayef bin Abdul-Aziz and organised by the Islamic University of Medina, drew some 500 participants, according to press reports.

The scholars condemned "all acts of terrorism wherever they take place and whoever is behind them," said the concluding statement from the conference, which wrapped up yesterday.

The scholars also criticised "the harm inflicted on unarmed civilians and civilian facilities under the pretext ofcombating international terrorism."  

The statement published on the organisers' website called
on extremists to "return to their senses and follow the path
of groups that have announced repentance and rejected acts of
terrorism."

"Hold on to moderate Islam and tolerance towards others," and "reject false interpretations of ... jihad (holy war)," it said, addressing Muslim youths.

The conference urged Muslim communities in non-Muslim countries to encourage their children "to adopt a moderate
understanding of Islam, respect for others and to comply with
(local) laws."

It also urged the governments of those countries to respect the rights of Muslims and "treat them equally with other members of the community." 

Saudi Arabia, which practises an ultra-conservative Wahhabi version of Islam, has in recent years cracked down on what it regards as extremist groups. 

Al-Qaeda, which has been blamed for killing between 150 and 200 people in the kingdom between 2003 and 2006, has in particular been in the firing line. 

Saudi King Abdullah last month said the kingdom is determined to halt extremism and a campaign was under way to try dissuade youths from joining Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), a merger of the Saudi and Yemeni branches of Osama bin Laden's network.

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