“I hope this will not be misunderstood, so that it defiles the sanctity of Islam.” Oh, no worries.
Sharia Alert from modern, moderate Malaysia: “Malaysia Court Canes Three Women,” by James Hookway in the Wall Street Journal, February 17 (thanks to all who sent this in):
Malaysian authorities said Wednesday that officials caned four Muslim men and, for the first time, three Muslim women this month after being found guilty of having sex out of wedlock.
The move to cane the women under the country’s Islamic Shariah laws has raised fresh concerns about the growing political and judicial influence of Islam in what traditionally has been one of the world’s more moderate Muslim nations.
The vibrant, resource-rich country came under intense international scrutiny last year after a Shariah court sentenced 32-year-old Kartika Sari Dewi Shukarno to be caned after she was caught drinking beer in a hotel bar. Many moderate Muslims and non-Muslim Malaysians saw that verdict as reflecting the growing reach of Islam in Malaysia over the past several years, although Prime Minister Najib Razak has said he won’t let Malaysia drift toward becoming an Islamist state.
The caning of Ms. Kartika, who is a Muslim, still hasn’t been carried out despite her requests to the Islamic courts to get it over with.
Wednesday’s announcement that three Muslim women were caned on Feb. 9 for having illicit sex thus came as a shock to many Malaysians. “This was a big a surprise. We had no idea this was going to happen,” said Ragunath Kesavan, president of the Malaysian Bar Council. “We were always told Ms. Kartika would be the first.” […]
“I hope this will not be misunderstood, so that it defiles the sanctity of Islam,” Mr. Hishammuddin said. “The punishment is to teach and give a chance to those who have fallen off the path to return and build a better life in the future.”
Two of the women and the four men were struck six times, while the other woman was struck four times.
Mr. Hishammuddin said that a doctor was present at the canings, which took place in male and female prisons, and that the offenders weren’t tied. The women were seated while they were struck, and no injuries were reported. The idea, the officials previously have said, is to humiliate rather than injure–unlike the canings administered to drug pushers and other violators of civil laws, which can sometimes leave deep scars.
The offenders, Mr. Hishammuddin said, were then “advised on ways to repent and to get closer to Allah.” […]
“As Shariah courts expand their reach, there is a question of jurisdication–about whether there should be corporal punishment at all,” said Mr. Kesavan, the bar council president. “We think it is degrading, and as Malaysia evolves towards adopting international standards in other areas, we should observe international standards in legal matters, too.” […]
“Islam is a big part of the equation here,” says James Chin, a political-science professor at the Malaysian campus of Australia’s Monash University….