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Yesterday, the monk said in an interview with the media that he has all the relevant evidence but only the parliament can present it.
“My evidence should be debated in Parliament. That’s where the law is made. There is no point in showing the evidence to anyone outside Parliament,” the monk said.
“We need help to disclose to Parliament the information we have collected over the past 15 to 20 years, which was provided by members of the traditional Muslim community, because the mainstream political parties do not give us space,” the monk noted.
The monk added: “Our goal is to showcase the extremist and fundamentalist messages that some people in the Muslim community are feeding us.”
“I want a seat in parliament to address these issues. Otherwise we don’t have a platform to disclose this information. We need to influence where the laws are made,” the monk said.
“Monks don’t need to go to parliament, but as monks we have a responsibility to protect the country’s cultural heritage. I am working hard to save the country,” the monk said.
“Whenever I speak outside parliament, extremist forces accuse me of hate speech. This is true. These extremist forces can kill people according to their teachings. There is no dispute about this. If we raise our voices, we will retaliate. Even if the neck is cut, keep your head down, this is the Dharma in the world,” the monk said.

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