Travel bans On 31 October 2017, Singapore banned Menk from its borders because it believes he expresses views incompatible with its multicultural laws and policies. According to the
Straits Times, he has asserted that "it is blasphemous for Muslims to greet believers of other faiths during festivals such as Christmas or Diwali". Singapore's Ministry of Home Affairs said in a statement that its decision to reject Menk's application for a short-term work pass stemmed from his "segregationist and divisive teachings". The Majlisul Ulama Zimbabwe, Menk's own institution, released a statement to express "regret and dismay" regarding the ban. It said that Menk was an "asset to multi‐cultural, multi‐religious Zimbabwe" and that viewers should "listen to his sermons in full" and not "edited clips of a few minutes" to see the moderate path he has chosen. In November 2018, the Danish government banned Menk from entering its borders for 2 years.
On homosexuality The Huffington Post reported that Menk denounced the act of homosexuality as "filthy". In 2013, he was due to visit six British universities –
Oxford,
Leeds,
Leicester,
Liverpool,
Cardiff and
Glasgow – but the speaking tour was cancelled after
student unions and university officials expressed concern about his views. Liverpool University stated that "it is not the role of the University to censor people's views, but rather to provide a neutral, open environment for them to be debated and challenged." However, Menk has since retracted his statements regarding
LGBT and homosexuality completely and states on his website: "on the issue of LGBT, let me clarify the statement I made back in 2011 which had me saying, "With all due respect to the animals, they are worse than those animals" was based on a misguided notion. I no longer believe that to be true. I make a full retraction of that statement". ==References==