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Sisters in Islam

Sisters in Islam condemns caning of three Muslim women

by: Salaam

Thu Feb 18, 2010 at 01:14:40 AM EST

A public letter from advocacy organization in Malaysia, Sisters in Islam.

Sisters in Islam condemns caning of three Muslim women under syariah law.

Sisters in Islam (SIS) is shocked that the Prisons Department has caned three Muslim women for shariah offences.

Given that several issues on shariah and constitutional grounds, sentencing guidelines and Malaysia's commitments to international human rights instruments that were raised on the Kartika case remain unresolved, we question the government's motive in proceeding with the caning of Muslim women.

And to do this surreptitiously implies that the government wanted to hide this degrading and unjust treatment from public scrutiny. We would also like to know whether the men involved were also found guilty for illicit sex and similarly sentenced and caned.

We urge the Women, Family and Community Development Minister Datuk Seri Shahrizat Abdul Jalil to take immediate steps to address the several unresolved issues arising from the caning sentence carried out on these women and the Kartika case.

This case constitutes further discrimination against Muslim women in Malaysia. It violates Constitutional guarantees of equality and non-discrimination as whipping of women under Shariah Criminal Offences legislation contradicts civil law where women are not punishable by caning under Section 289 of the Criminal Procedure Code.

We once again urge the government to review caning as a form of punishment as it violates international human rights principles which regard whipping and other forms of corporal punishment as cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment. Moreover, research has shown that caning is not an effective deterrent, even to violent or sexual crimes.

Dr Hamidah Marican
Executive Director
Sisters in Islam
17 Feb 2010

Source

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Malaysian court lifts ban on book by Sisters in Islam

by: Salaam

Tue Jan 26, 2010 at 11:26:06 AM EST

The Kuala Lumpur High Court ruled Monday that "Muslim Women and the Challenge of Islamic Extremism" did not pose any threat to national security, said Malik Imtiaz Sarwar, a lawyer for Sisters in Islam, the Malaysian women's advocacy group that published the book.

The Home Ministry had banned the compilation of essays in 2008, two years after it went into circulation, saying it could undermine people's faith and disrupt public order.

According to a 2008 ministry letter to Sisters in Islam, the book mainly went too far in questioning whether Islamic family laws discriminate against women in issues such as polygamy and divorce.

Story here.

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