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No new fatwa on Pokemon game

No new fatwa on Pokemon game
TIME-WASTER: "Pokemon Go" players begin a group walk along the Embarcadero in San Francisco, California, on Wednesday. The game has been banned in the kingdom. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)
Updated 22 July 2016

No new fatwa on Pokemon game

No new fatwa on Pokemon game

JEDDAH: The Council of Senior Scholars have denied issuing a new fatwa (edict) banning the popular Pokemon game in the Kingdom.
"The Council of Senior Religious Scholars denied that it issued a new fatwa about the Pokemon game, and the media reports of that are not accurate," said Abdulmohsen Alyas, undersecretary for international communication and media at the Ministry of Culture and Information.
"We ask international media to call the ministry to verify information for their reports," Alyas said.
On its Twitter account, the council said no fatwa had been issued for the new Pokemon game.
The Ministry of Culture and Information and the scholars were reacting to local media reports that the council had renewed a 15-year-old edict declaring that the Pokemon game was un-Islamic.
Local media reports said Wednesday that the council had revived a 2001 decree against a Pokemon card game in response to queries from Muslims, although it made no mention of the new Pokemon GO mobile game.
Users of the game walk around their real-life neighborhoods in search of scores of "pocket monsters", which emerge superimposed on the phone screen via its camera.
The 2001 fatwa said the card game contained elements prohibited by Islamic law such as gambling.
However, Saudi authorities said the social media reports were unfounded.
In conservative ¶¶Òõ¶ÌÊÓƵ, home to Islam's two holiest sites, cinemas are banned and women's sports are discouraged as promoting sin.
Middle Eastern states are often wary of social media use by their growing youth populations. Authorities in Kuwait and Egypt have already warned that Pokemon players might be tempted to point their smartphones at restricted locations such as royal palaces, mosques, oil facilities or military bases.

(Reporting by William Maclean)