Steven Spielberg's animated epic The Prince of Egypt has been banned in Malaysia.

Government officials in the country said the film had been banned so as not to offend the country's majority Muslim population.

Film Censorship Board chairman Lukeman Saaid said: "We found it insensitive for religious and moral reasons. Because of the many races in Malaysia, religion is a very sensitive issue."

But trailers for the film, which depicts the life of Moses, have already been running for weeks in the country's cinemas.

"Everybody was anticipating The Prince Of Egypt. It's just a cartoon, I don't see why they should ban it," said a staff member at one cinema, Tanjong Golden Village.

Strict censorship in Malaysia





About 60% of Malaysia's 22 million people are Muslim; the remainder are Christian, Hindu or Buddhist. Film censors in the country have little tolerance over nudity, sex, strong language, violence or sensitive religious themes in films. But it also wants to be Asia's film-making centre as part of a plan to boost the information technology industry. The ban has angered opposition leader Lim Kit Sang. He said: "This high-handed attitude may be the order of yesteryear but is no more satisfactory or acceptable in this modern age of information technology. "How can Malaysia become Asia's film-making hub when it has such outmoded censorship laws?" 'Pirate copies available'



