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Jan 21, 2010
NZ to remove Bible citations
<!-- by line --> <!-- end by line --> WELLINGTON (New Zealand) - NEW Zealand said Thursday that Biblical citations inscribed on US-manufactured weapon sights used by New Zealand's troops in Afghanistan will be removed, saying they are inappropriate and could stoke religious tensions. The inscriptions on products from defense contractor Trijicon of Wixom, Michigan, came to light this week in the US where Army officials said Tuesday they would investigate whether the gun sights - also used by US troops in Afghanistan and Iraq - violate US procurement laws. Australia also said Thursday its military used the sights and was now assessing what to do.
Trijicon said it has had such inscriptions on its products for three decades and has never received complaints about them before. The inscriptions, which don't include actual text from the Bible, refer numerically to passages from the book. New Zealand defense force spokesman Maj. Kristian Dunne said that Trijicon would be instructed to remove the inscriptions from further orders of the gun sights for New Zealand and that the letters would be removed from gun sights already in use by troops. 'The inscriptions... put us in a difficult situation. We were unaware of it and we're unhappy that the manufacturer didn't give us any indication that these were on there,' Dunne said. 'We deem them to be inappropriate.' -- AP
Home > Breaking News > World > Story
Jan 21, 2010
NZ to remove Bible citations
<!-- by line --> <!-- end by line --> WELLINGTON (New Zealand) - NEW Zealand said Thursday that Biblical citations inscribed on US-manufactured weapon sights used by New Zealand's troops in Afghanistan will be removed, saying they are inappropriate and could stoke religious tensions. The inscriptions on products from defense contractor Trijicon of Wixom, Michigan, came to light this week in the US where Army officials said Tuesday they would investigate whether the gun sights - also used by US troops in Afghanistan and Iraq - violate US procurement laws. Australia also said Thursday its military used the sights and was now assessing what to do.
Trijicon said it has had such inscriptions on its products for three decades and has never received complaints about them before. The inscriptions, which don't include actual text from the Bible, refer numerically to passages from the book. New Zealand defense force spokesman Maj. Kristian Dunne said that Trijicon would be instructed to remove the inscriptions from further orders of the gun sights for New Zealand and that the letters would be removed from gun sights already in use by troops. 'The inscriptions... put us in a difficult situation. We were unaware of it and we're unhappy that the manufacturer didn't give us any indication that these were on there,' Dunne said. 'We deem them to be inappropriate.' -- AP