Malaysia: Terengganu Hudud and Qisas bill
Source:
The Women's Centre for Change, Penang (Pusat Kesedaran Wanita) and Sisters In Islam In April the state government, led by the opposition Parti Islam SeMalaysia (PAS), proposed a bill to institute new laws governing rape. It was set to be tabled in the State government special assembly in July.
At present, rape is considered a criminal offence under the federal laws and is not governed by Syariah Islamic laws legislating marriage, divorce, inheritance and other family matters. Initial drafts of the bill state that if the victim cannot prove the rape, she could be deemed guilty of qazaf (slanderous accusations) and liable to be whipped 80 times, and if an unmarried woman becomes pregnant, regardless of rape, she could be charged with zina (fornication) and could face 100 lashes or death by stoning. The Women's Centre for Change, Penang (Pusat Kesedaran Wanita) provides an overview of the bill.
Sisters in Islam (SIS), which fights for women's rights within the framework of Islam, describes the bill as "perversely unjust" and "a total distortion" of Islamic law. It argues that much of Islamic jurisprudence historically has been made by men, and says poor implementation of hudud laws in Nigeria and Pakistan have resulted in "an extreme ... violation of women".
Sisters in Islam (SIS), which fights for women's rights within the framework of Islam, describes the bill as "perversely unjust" and "a total distortion" of Islamic law. It argues that much of Islamic jurisprudence historically has been made by men, and says poor implementation of hudud laws in Nigeria and Pakistan have resulted in "an extreme ... violation of women".
Website Link:
http://www.wccpenang.org/l'overviewhudud.htm
Submitted on Sun, 08/04/2002 - 23:00
Related News
- Mauritania broadens death penalty for blasphemy
- 'We will break every bone': Islamist leaders threaten Bangladeshi lawyer, WLUML Networker
- UN Special Rapporteur in Field of Cultural Rights on the Paris Attacks: “Crime against humanity, crime against culture”
- What ISIS has done to the lives of women
- Malaysia: Women’s groups insist that marital rape be made a crime
Related Actions
- Protect Human Rights Activist Sultana Kamal
- Statement in Condemnation of Terrorist Attack Targeting Media Organizations in Afghanistan
- We Strongly Condemn the Terrorist Attacks Taking Place in the Name of “Islam”
- Women Living Under Muslim Laws (WLUML) condemns the harassment of Sri Lankan activist Sharmila Seyyid
- Call for Iraqi Women Victimized by ISIS
Relevant Resources
- Promotion and protection of human rights: human rights questions, including alternative approaches for improving the effective enjoyment of human rights and fundamental freedoms
- Special Issue: Gender and Fundamentalism
- Position Statement on Apostasy and Blasphemy
- Report of the Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion or Belief, Heiner Bielefeldt, Human Rights Council 28th Session
- Dossier 30-31: The Struggle for Secularism in Europe and North America